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1.
In the wood lemming (Myopus schisticolor) three genetic types of sex chromosome constitution in females are postulated: XX, X*X and X*Y (X*=X with a mutation inactivating the male determining effect of the Y chromosome). Males are all XY. It is shown in the present paper that the two types of X chromosomes, X and X*, exhibit differences in the G-band patterns of their short arms. In addition, it was demonstrated in unbanded chromosomes that the short arm in X* is shorter than in X. The origin of these differences is still obscure; but they allow to identify and to distinguish the individual types of sex chromosome constitution, as of XX versus X*X females and of X*Y females versus XY males, on the basis of G-banded chromosome preparations from somatic cells.  相似文献   

2.
Summary H-Y antigen was investigated in 18 specimens representing six different sex chromosome constitutions of the wood lemming (Myopus schisticolor). The control range of H-Y antigen was defined by the sex difference between normal XX females (H-Y negativeper definitionem) and normal XY males (H-Y positive, full titer). H-Y antigen titers of the X*Y and X*0 females were in the male control range, while in the X*X and X0 females the titers were intermediary. Data were obtained with two different H-Y antigen assays: the Raji cell cytotoxicity test and the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) method. Fibroblasts, gonadal cells, and spleen cells were checked. Presence of full titers of H-Y antigen in the absence of testis differentiation is readily explained by the assumption of a deficiency of the gonadspecific receptor of H-Y antigen. Since sex reversal is inherited as an X-linked trait, genes for this receptor are most likely X-linked. The implications of our findings are discussed in connection with earlier findings concerning H-Y antigen in XY gonadal dysgenesis in man and the X0 situation in man and mouse.  相似文献   

3.
The wood lemming displays certain peculiar features: (1) The sex ratio shows a prevalence of females (FRANK, 1966; KALELA and OKSALA, 1966), and some females produce only female offspring (KALELA and OKSALA, 1966). (2) In a considerable proportion (in the present material, slightly less than half) of the females, an XY chromosome complement is found in the somatic tissues, but the Y is absent in the germ line of those studied (Fredga et al., 1976). Therefore, (3) a mechanism of double nondisjunction in early fetal life of XY females has to be postulated, which replaces the Y in the germ line by duplication of the X. It is assumed (4) that the X of XY females bears a sex-reversal factor that affects the male determining action of the Y (Fredga et al., 1977). There is (5) a strong presumption that in most cases the XY females are those that produce daughters only, but (6) a few exceptions may occur (FRANK, unpublished observations), suggesting that the regulation according to assumption 3 (perhaps also to 4) is incomplete in XY females. In the present report, four females are described with a 31,XO karyotype, two females with 33,XYY or 32,XY/33,XYY, respectively, two males with a 33,XXY, and one male with a 32,XX/33,XXY karyotype, as observed in a consecutive series of 502 wood lemmings. The incidence of sex-chromosome anomalies in liveborn and adult animals was 2.3%; the overall incidence, including embryos, was 1.79%. Neither the somatic XO constitution nor the existence of an extra Y in females precludes fertility. However, the XXY condition in the male results in sterility. There is certain evidence that an instability of the proposed mechanism for double mitotic nondisjunction of the sex chromosomes in oogonia accounts for the high rate of sex-chromosome aberrations in wood lemmings, at least when the mother is XY.  相似文献   

4.
Univalent sex chromosomes in spermatocytes of Sxr-carrying mice   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Pachytene configurations of the sex chromosomes were studied in whole-mount, silver-stained preparations of spermatocytes in mice with XY,Sxr, XX,Sxr, XO,Sxr, XO,Sxr+512 and T(X;4)37H,YSxr chromosomes, and non-Sxr-carrying controls. XY,Sxr males showed an increased number of X and Y univalents and of self-synapsed Y chromosomes. In T(X;4)37H,YSxr males an increased proportion of trivalent+Y configurations was also accompanied by higher numbers of self-paired Y univalents; the proportion of trivalent+X4 was not increased, but that of self-synapsed X4 univalents was. There was more selfsynapsis in cells containing one univalent than in cells containing two univalents. Spermatocytes of XX,Sxr mice contained single univalent X, which was never seen to be self-synapsed, but self-synapsis of the X occurred in a proportion of cells in XO,Sxr males. There were no self-paired X chromosomes in the XO,Sxr+512 mouse although lowlevel pairing of the 512 chromosome occurred. All four XX,Sxr and XO,Sxr males contained testicular sperm, and testicular sperm were also present in one T(X;4)37H male, while another such male had sperm in the caput. It is concluded that (1) self-synapsis of univalents is affected by variable conditions in the cell as well as by the DNA sequences of the chromosome, and (2) that the level of achievable spermatogenesis is not always rigidly predetermined by a chromosome anomaly but can be modulated by the genetic background.  相似文献   

5.
Male mammals with two X chromosomes are sterile due to the demise of virtually all germ cells; however, the underlying reasons for the germ cell loss remain unclear. The use of a breeding scheme for the production of XXY male mice has allowed us to experimentally address the question of when and why germ cells die in the XXY testis and whether the defect is due to the presence of an additional X chromosome in the soma, the germ cells themselves, or both. Our studies demonstrate that altered X-chromosome dosage acts to impair germ cell development in the testis at a much earlier stage than suggested by previous studies of XX sex-reversed males or XX/XY chimeras. Specifically, we noted significantly reduced germ cell numbers in the XXY testis during the period of germ cell proliferation in the early stages of testis differentiation. Although the somatic development of the XXY testis is morphologically and temporally normal, our studies indicate that germ cell demise reflects a defect in somatic/germ cell communication, since, in an in vitro system, the proliferative potential of fetal germ cells from XXY males is indistinguishable from that of normal males. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 49:101–111, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
Both mouse and man have the common XX/XY sex chromosome mechanism. The X chromosome is of original size (5-6% of female haploid set) and the Y is one of the smallest chromosomes of the complement. But there are species, belonging to a variety of orders, with composite sex chromosomes and multiple sex chromosome systems: XX/XY1Y2 and X1X1X2X2/X1X2Y. The original X or the Y, respectively, have been translocated on to an autosome. The sex chromosomes of these species segregate regularly at meiosis; two kinds of sperm and one kind of egg are produced and the sex ratio is the normal 1:1. Individuals with deviating sex chromosome constitutions (XXY, XYY, XO or XXX) have been found in at least 16 mammalian species other than man. The phenotypic manifestations of these deviating constitutions are briefly discussed. In the dog, pig, goat and mouse exceptional XX males and in the horse XY females attract attention. Certain rodents have complicated mechanisms for sex determination: Ellobius lutescens and Tokudaia osimensis have XO males and females. Both sexes of Microtus oregoni are gonosomic mosaics (male OY/XY, female XX/XO). The wood lemming, Myopus schisticolor, the collared lemming, Dirostonyx torquatus, and perhaps also one or two species of the genus Akodon have XX and XY females and XY males. The XX, X*X and X*Y females of Myopus and Dicrostonyx are discussed in some detail. The wood lemming has proved to be a favourable natural model for studies in sex determination, because a large variety of sex chromosome aneuploids are born relatively frequently. The dosage model for sex determination is not supported by the wood lemming data. For male development, genes on both the X and the Y chromosomes are necessary.  相似文献   

7.
The existence of fertile A. azarae females with a chromosome sex pair indistinguishable from that of males was reported more than 35 years ago. These heterogametic females were initially thought to occur due to an extreme process of dosage compensation in which X inactivation was restricted to Xp and complemented by a deletion of Xq (Xx females). Later on, a C-banding analysis of A. mollis variant females showed that these specimens were in fact XY* sex reversed and not Xx females. The finding of positive testing for Zfy and Sry multiple-copy genes in Akodon males and heterogametic females confirmed the XY* assumption. At the present time, XY* sex reversed females have been found to exist in nine Akodon species. Akodon heterogametic females produce X and Y* oocytes, which upon sperm fertilization give rise to viable XX (female), XY* (female), and XY (male) embryos, and to non-viable Y*Y zygotes. Heterozygous females exhibit a better reproductive performance than XX females in order to compensate the Y*Y zygote wastage. XY* sex reversed females are assumed to occur due to a deficient Sry expression resulting in the development of ovaries instead of testes. Moreover, the appearance of Y* elements is a highly recurrent event. It is proposed that homozygosity for an autosomal or pseudoautosomal recessive mutation (s-) inhibits Sry expression giving rise to XY* embryos with ovary development. Location of the Y* chromosome in the female germ cell lineage produces an ovary-specific imprinting of the Sry* gene maintaining its defective expression through generations independently from the presence or absence of s- homozygosity. By escaping the ovary-specific methylation some Y* chromosomes turn back to normal Ys producing Y oocytes capable of generating normal male embryos when fertilized by an X sperm. Fluctuations in the rate of variant females in field populations and in laboratory colonies of Akodon depend on the balance between the appearance of new variant females (s-/s-, XY* specimens) and the extinction of sex reversed specimens due to imprinting escape.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The genetic terminology of sex determination and sex differentiation is examined in relation to its underlying biological basis. On the assumption that the function of the testis is to produce hormones and spermatozoa, the hypothesis of a single Y-chromosomal testis-determining gene with a dominant effect is shown to run counter to the following observed facts: a lowering in testosterone levels and an increase in the incidence of undescended testes, in addition to sterility, in males with multiple X chromosomes; abnormalities of the testes in autosomal trisomies; phenotypic abnormalities of XX males apparently increasing with decreasing amounts of Y-chromosomal material; the occurrence of patients with gonadal dysgenesis and XY males with ambiguous genitalia in the same sibship; the occurrence of identical SRY mutations in patients with gonadal dysgenesis and fertile males in the same pedigree; and the development of XY female and hermaphrodite mice having the same genetic constitution. The role of X inactivation in the production of males, females and hermaphrodites in T(X;16)16H mice has previously been suggested but not unequivocally demonstrated; moreover, X inactivation cannot account for the observed bilateral asymmetry of gonadal differentiation in XY hermaphrodites in humans and mice. There is evidence for a delay in development of the supporting cells in XY mice with ovarian formation. Once testicular differentiation and male hormone secretion have begun, other Y-chromosomal genes are required to maintain spermatogenesis and to complete spermiogenesis, but these genes do not function effectively in the presence of more than one X chromosome. The impairment of spermatogenesis by many other chromosome abnormalities seems to be more severe than that of oogenesis. It is concluded that the notion of a single testis-determining gene being responsible for male sex differentiation lacks biological validity, and that the genotype of a functional, i.e. fertile, male differs from that of a functional female by the presence of multiple Y-chromosomal genes in association with but a single X chromosome. Male sex differentiation in XY individuals can be further impaired by a euploid, but inappropriate, genetic background. The genes involved in testis development may function as growth regulators in the tissues in which they are active.  相似文献   

9.
Three types of male larvae, normal X males and two types with structurally abnormal X chromosomes (ring X and short X sc 4 sc 3, y) were treated during the third instar with 0.5 per cent caffeine in nutrient medium. Upon eclosion, these males were mated to yellow and Oregon-R wild type females. The F1 generation of each cross was scored for normal (XX and XY) and abnormal (XO and XXY) progeny. Statistical analyses of data demonstrate that caffeine increases chromosomal loss for all genotypes tested. The effect of caffeine on nondisjunction, however, is not clear. There are at least marginal increases in all cases when Oregon-R females are used. Slight increase and decreases noted for offspring of yellow females appear to be dependent upon the genotype of the inseminating male.  相似文献   

10.
An SRY-negative 47,XXY mother and daughter   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Females with XY gonadal dysgenesis are sterile, due to degeneration of the initially present ovaries into nonfunctional streak gonads. Some of these sex-reversal cases can be attributed to mutation or deletion of the SRY gene. We now describe an SRY-deleted 47,XXY female who has one son and two daughters, and one of her daughters has the same 47,XXY karyotype. PCR and FISH analysis revealed that the mother carries a structurally altered Y chromosome that most likely resulted from an aberrant X-Y interchange between the closely related genomic regions surrounding the gene pair PRKX and PRKY on Xp22.3 and Yp11.2, respectively. As a consequence, Yp material, including SRY, has been replaced by terminal Xp sequences up to the PRKX gene. The fertility of the XXY mother can be attributed to the presence of the additional X chromosome that is missing in XY gonadal dysgenesis females. To our knowledge, this is the first human XXY female described who is fertile.  相似文献   

11.
The wolf fish Hoplias malabaricus includes well differentiated sex systems (XY and X1X2Y in karyomorphs B and D, respectively), a nascent XY pair (karyomorph C) and not recognized sex chromosomes (karyomorph A). We performed the evolutionary analysis of these sex chromosomes, using two X chromosome-specific probes derived by microdissection from the XY and X1X2Y sex systems. A putative-sex pair in karyomorph A was identified, from which the differentiated XY system was evolved, as well as the clearly evolutionary relationship between the nascent XY system and the origin of the multiple X1X2Y chromosomes. The lack of recognizable signals on the sex chromosomes after the reciprocal cross-FISH experiments highlighted that they evolved independently from non-homologous autosomal pairs. It is noteworthy that these distinct pathways occur inside the same nominal species, thus exposing the high plasticity of sex chromosome evolution in lower vertebrates. Possible mechanisms underlying this sex determination liability are also discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The chromosome number in males of Antheraea compta (Wild) and A. assamensis (semi-domesticated) is 30, while in females it is 30 (XY) in A. compta and 29 (XO) in A. assamensis, the latter concomitantly does not reveal sex chromatin in interphase nuclei of both somatic and germ cells. This confirms that the Y chromosome, which forms the sex chromatin in females of A. compta, has been lost in the other species. Meiosis in males shows discrete chiasmata while in females of both species it is achiasmatic. Meiotic details of the species are given and the evolutionary inter-relationship is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Klinefelter's syndrome (KS) is the most common sex chromosome abnormality identified in human males. This syndrome is generally associated with infertility. Men with KS may have a 47,XXY or a 46,XY/47,XXY karyotype. Studies carried out in humans and mice suggest that only XY cells are able to enter and complete meiosis. These cells could originate from the XY cells present in mosaic patients or from XXY cells that have lost one X chromosome. In pig, only 3 cases of pure 39,XXY have been reported until now, and no meiotic analysis was carried out. For the first time in pig species we report the analysis of a 38,XY/39,XXY boar and describe the origin of the supplementary X chromosome and the chromosomal constitutions of the germ and Sertoli cells.  相似文献   

14.
The canonical model of sex‐chromosome evolution assigns a key role to sexually antagonistic (SA) genes on the arrest of recombination and ensuing degeneration of Y chromosomes. This assumption cannot be tested in organisms with highly differentiated sex chromosomes, such as mammals or birds, owing to the lack of polymorphism. Fixation of SA alleles, furthermore, might be the consequence rather than the cause of recombination arrest. Here we focus on a population of common frogs (Rana temporaria) where XY males with genetically differentiated Y chromosomes (nonrecombinant Y haplotypes) coexist with both XY° males with proto‐Y chromosomes (only differentiated from X chromosomes in the immediate vicinity of the candidate sex‐determining locus Dmrt1) and XX males with undifferentiated sex chromosomes (genetically identical to XX females). Our study finds no effect of sex‐chromosome differentiation on male phenotype, mating success or fathering success. Our conclusions rejoin genomic studies that found no differences in gene expression between XY, XY° and XX males. Sexual dimorphism in common frogs might result more from the differential expression of autosomal genes than from sex‐linked SA genes. Among‐male variance in sex‐chromosome differentiation seems better explained by a polymorphism in the penetrance of alleles at the sex locus, resulting in variable levels of sex reversal (and thus of X‐Y recombination in XY females), independent of sex‐linked SA genes.  相似文献   

15.
Several X-linked mutations that have associated sex chromosomal nondisjunction have been identified in the mouse. We describe a new semidominant X-linked mutation called patchy fur (Paf) that produces an abnormal coat. It maps to the distal end of the murine X chromosome very near the XY pseudoautosomal region. The degree of severity in affected mice is hemizygous males greater than homozygous females greater than heterozygous females. An unusual feature of Paf is that either the mutation itself or an inseparable chromosomal abnormality causes delayed disjunction of the X and Y chromosomes at meiotic metaphase I, which in turn results in approximately 19% XO progeny and slightly less than 1% XXY progeny from Paf/Y males. The effect occurs only in male carriers and thus must extend into the proximal end of the XY pairing region.  相似文献   

16.
A repeated DNA element (STIR) interspersed in Xp22.3 and on the Y chromosome has been used as a tag to isolate seven single-copy probes from the human sex chromosomes. The seven probes detect X-specific loci located in Xp22.3. Using a panel of X-chromosomal deletions from X-Y interchange sex reversals (XX males and XY females), these X-specific loci and some additional ones were mapped to four contiguous intervals of Xp22.3, proximal to the pseudoautosomal region and distal to STS. The construction of this deletion map of the terminal part of the human X chromosome can serve as a starting point for a long-range physical map of Xp22.3 and for a more accurate mapping of genetic diseases located in Xp22.3.  相似文献   

17.
X inactivation is a fundamental mechanism in eutherian mammals to restore a balance of X-linked gene products between XY males and XX females. However, it has never been extensively studied in a eutherian species with a sex determination system that deviates from the ubiquitous XX/XY. In this study, we explore the X inactivation process in the African pygmy mouse Mus minutoides, that harbours a polygenic sex determination with three sex chromosomes: Y, X, and a feminizing mutant X, named X*; females can thus be XX, XX*, or X*Y, and all males are XY. Using immunofluorescence, we investigated histone modification patterns between the two X chromosome types. We found that the X and X* chromosomes are randomly inactivated in XX* females, while no histone modifications were detected in X*Y females. Furthermore, in M. minutoides, X and X* chromosomes are fused to different autosomes, and we were able to show that the X inactivation never spreads into the autosomal segments. Evaluation of X inactivation by immunofluorescence is an excellent quantitative procedure, but it is only applicable when there is a structural difference between the two chromosomes that allows them to be distinguished.  相似文献   

18.
In the mouse XYY males are sterile, presumably because pairing abnormalities resulting from the presence of three sex chromosomes lead to meiotic breakdown. We have produced male mice, designated XYY*X, that have three sex chromosome pairing regions but only one intact Y chromosome. Unexpectedly XYY*X males are fertile, although they are no more efficient in sex chromosome pairing than previously reported XYY males. We conclude that the sterility of XYY males is caused by a combination of the deleterious effect of two Y chromosomes, presumably acting prior to meiosis, and pairing abnormalities resulting in significant meiotic disruption.by P.B. Moens  相似文献   

19.
All therian mammals have a similar XY/XX sex‐determination system except for a dozen species. The African pygmy mouse, Mus minutoides, harbors an unconventional system in which all males are XY, and there are three types of females: the usual XX but also XX* and X*Y ones (the asterisk designates a sex‐reversal mutation on the X chromosome). The long‐term evolution of such a system is a paradox, because X*Y females are expected to face high reproductive costs (e.g., meiotic disruption and loss of unviable YY embryos), which should prevent invasion and maintenance of a sex‐reversal mutation. Hence, mechanisms for compensating for the costs could have evolved in M. minutoides. Data gathered from our laboratory colony revealed that X*Y females do compensate and even show enhanced reproductive performance in comparison to the XX and XX*; they produce significantly more offspring due to (i) a higher probability of breeding, (ii) an earlier first litter, and (iii) a larger litter size, linked to (iv) a greater ovulation rate. These findings confirm that rare conditions are needed for an atypical sex‐determination mechanism to evolve in mammals, and provide valuable insight into understanding modifications of systems with highly heteromorphic sex chromosomes.  相似文献   

20.
Gonadal effects of the Denys-Drash syndrome (DDS) mutation Wt1tmT396 were examined in chimaeric and heterozygous mice. Since the only heterozygote was 41,XXY, Sertoli cell function was assessed by comparison with age-matched control XXY testes. Control XXY Sertoli cells showed immunoexpression of WT1 and androgen receptor (AR) indistinguishable from wild-type (40,XY), but expressed anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH). In contrast, DDS Sertoli cells showed only faint immunoexpression of WT1 and did not express AR or AMH. While XY↔XY DDS chimaeras were male, XX↔XY chimaeras were predominantly female. In the rare XX↔XY DDS males the Sertoli cell lineage was largely derived from Wt1 mutant XY cells. We conclude that DDS mutant cells can form Sertoli cells, that the dominant mutation does not cause male sex reversal in mice but distorts the sex ratio of XX↔XY chimaeras, and that there may be a link between WT1, AMH and AR expression by Sertoli cells in vivo.  相似文献   

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