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1.
S Ohno  Y Nagai  S Ciccarese  R Smith 《In vitro》1979,15(1):11-18
In a very strict sense, the primary (gonadal) sex of mammals is determined not so much by the presence or absence of the Y but the expression or nonexpression of the evolutionary extremely conserved plasma membrane H-Y antigen. The central somatic blastema of embryonic indifferent gonads contains one cell lineage characterized by the possession of S-F differentiation antigen that differentiates into testicular Sertoli cells in the presence of H-Y and into ovarian follicular (granulosa) cells in its absence. This cell lineage appears to play the most critical role in gonadal differentiation. Whether or not testicular Leydig cells and ovarian theca cells are similarly derived from the common cell lineage has not been determined. Nevertheless, if given H-Y antigen, presumptive theca-cell precursors of the fetal ovary acquire hCG (LH?)-receptors-the characteristic of fetal Leydig cells.  相似文献   

2.
U Müller  U Wolf  J W Siebers  E Günther 《Cell》1979,17(2):331-335
This report addresses the question whether two different types of binding exist for the reaction of H-Y antigen with the cell surface. Anti-H-Y antiserum in the presence of complement was cytotoxic only for gonadal cells expressing their own H-Y antigen, but not to ovarian cells loaded with H-Y antigen. H-Y antigen was co-redistributed with beta 2--microglobulin on newborn testicular cells, but some residual H-Y activity was found on similarly treated testis cells from 15 day old rats. After beta 2--microglobulin redistribution, testis cells maintained their binding capacity for exogenous H-Y antigen prepared from epididymal fluid or Daudi cell culture supernatants. This result suggests that exogenous H-Y antigen is bound via a gonad-specific receptor which is independent of beta 2--microglobulin and that this type of binding for H-Y antigen is different from the beta 2--m-associated expression of H-Y antigen on the cell surface.  相似文献   

3.
Yukifumi Nagai  Susumu Ohno 《Cell》1977,10(4):729-732
The XO sex chromosome constitution has been found in both sexes of the mole-vole (Ellobius lutescens) belonging to the rodent family Microtinae. This enigmatic species has apparently been enduring a 50% zygotic lethality. The current serological study revealed the presence in XO males and the absence from XO females of H-Y (histocompatibility Y) antigen. In all the mammalian species studied thus far, the expression of H-Y antigen strictly coincided with the presence of testicular tissue and not necessarily with the presence of the Y chromosome. The testis-organizing function of the H-Y gene appears to have been confirmed.In the mole-vole, X linkage of the testis-organizing H-Y gene is favored over its autosomal inheritance. Only X linkage of the H-Y gene creates a compelling evolutionary need to change the female sex chromosome constitution from XX to XO, and to abandon the dosage compensation by an X inactivation mechanism, so that the nonproductive XH-YX zygote can be eliminated as an embryonic lethal. With regard to the electrophoretic mobilities of three X-linked marker enzymes, however, a genetic difference between the male-specific XH-Y and the female-specific X was not detected. This might reflect a relatively recent speciation.  相似文献   

4.
H-Y antigens   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
U. Müller 《Human genetics》1996,97(6):701-704
H-Y antigen is defined as a male histocompatibility antigen that causes rejection of male skin grafts by female recipients of the same inbred strain of rodents. Male-specific, or H-Y antigen(s), are also detected by cytotoxic T cells and antibodies. H-Y antigen appears to be an integral part of the membrane of most male cells. In addition, H-Y antibodies detect a soluble form of H-Y that is secreted by the testis. The gene (Smcy/SMCY) coding for H-Y antigen detected by T cells has been cloned. It is expressed ubiquitously in male mice and humans, and encodes an epitope that triggers a specific T -cell response in vitro. Additional epitopes coded for by different Y-chromosomal genes are probably required in vivo for the rejection of male grafts by female hosts. The molecular nature of H-Y antigen detected by antibodies on most male cells is not yet known. Testis-secreted, soluble H-Y antigen, however, was found to be identical to Müllerian-inhibiting substance (MIS). MIS cross-reacts with H-Y antibodies and identical findings were obtained for soluble H-Y antigen and MIS, i.e., secretion by testicular Sertoli and, to a lesser degree, ovarian cells, binding to a gonad-specific receptor, induction of gonadal sex reversal in vitro and, in cattle, in vivo. H-Y antisera also detect a molecule or molecules associated with the heterogametic sex in nonmammalian vertebrates. Molecular data on this antigen or antigens are not yet available.  相似文献   

5.
Summary H-Y antigen was determined in seven XO-, nine XO/XX patients, in one patient with i(Xq), and in one patient with a mosaic XO/XYqh-. It turned out that all patients are H-Y antigen positive, confirming the results of earlier investigations of H-Y antigen in patients with Turner's syndrome. The results in XO/XX mosaics clearly demonstrate that the XO-cell is H-Y antigen positive and support the view of a regulatory gene for H-Y antigen gene expression which is located on the X chromosome.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The existence of a strict correlation between presence of testicular tissue and presence of H-Y antigen in mammals and man leads to the conclusion that H-Y antigen is an essential differentiation factor in testicular morphogenesis. Presence of low titers of this differentiation antigen even in fertile females indicates that its morphogenetic effect depends on a threshold. Here, studies on H-Y antigen in female individuals with various deletions of the X-chromosome are reported. It turns out that deletion of Xp results in the synthesis of reduced amounts of H-Y antigen, while deletion of Xq does not. In a fertile female with only Xp223 deleted due to an X/Y translocation, including the distal Yq, presence of a reduced H-Y titer allows for the tentative assignment of a controlling gene repressing the H-Y structural gene. From the cases studied, it follows that the H-Y structural gene is autosomal and under the control of X- and Y-linked genes. The conception emerges that interaction between X- and Y-linked genes or their products results in variation of the H-Y antigen titer. The fate of the indifferent gonadal anlage to differentiate into the male or the female direction will depend on the titer of H-Y antigen reached by the action or interaction of the controlling genes involved.Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 46)  相似文献   

7.
Summary H-Y antigen was determined in eight transsexual patients. Two of the four male-to-female transsexual patients typed as H-Y antigen-negative, while the other two typed as expected from their phenotypic and gonadal sex, namely H-Y antigen-positive. Of the four female-to-male transsexual patients, three typed as H-Y antigen-positive and one was H-Y antigen-negative, as expected. The presence of normal testes in H-Y antigen-negative males is assumed to result from a mutation of nucleotide sequences of the H-Y structural gene for antigenic determinants. Thus, an H-Y is produced with normal receptor-binding activity which can sustain the testis determination of the bipotent gonadal anlage. In the case of H-Y antigen-positive females with normal ovaries a deletion of the autosomally located H-Y structural gene is assumed. This deletion should affect sequences for repressor-binding (as was suggested for H-Y antigen-positive XX-males) and for receptor-binding activity of the H-Y antigen molecule. The resulting H-Y antigen is unable to bind to the gonadal receptor of the bipotent gonadal anlage. Thus an ovary is determined. The relevance of H-Y antigen for the aetiology of transsexualism is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The strength of the H-Y antigen on thymus cells and on skin was compared in differentH-2-congenic mouse strains using a host-versus-graft reaction popliteal lymph node assay, and skin grafts from males of parental strains grafted to F1 hybrid females. The results revealed considerable differences in the strength of the H-Y antigen among different congenic strains; these differences demonstrate the effect of theH-2-linked gene on the expression of the H-Y antigen. The linkage withH-2 was also confirmed in tests with segregating F2 generations. In the strains bearing recombinantH-2 haplotypes, the strength of the H-Y antigen is similar to that of parental strain from which the recombinant received itsK end, and the responsible gene (or genes) map to the left ofI-C. The effect of theH-2-linked gene(s) on thymus cells and skin is different. The gene linked to theK end ofH- 2b determines a strong H-Y antigen on thymus cells, but a relatively weak H-Y antigen on skin. The gene linked to theK end ofH- 2k determines a weak H-Y antigen on thymus cells, but a strong H-Y antigen on skin. The gene linked to theK end ofH- 2d determines a weak H-Y antigen on both thymus cells and skin. Our observations raise the possibility that the structural gene for the H-Y antigen is linked toH-2. Alternative (but not exclusive) explanations invoke regulatory effects ofH-2 on the expression of the H-Y antigen, possibly by means of the control of the cellular andogen receptors.  相似文献   

9.
H-Y antigen is a surface component associated with the heterogametic sex of various species and supposed to induce testicular differentiation. Genes controlling directly or not the expression of H-Y antigen and testicular differentiation have been localized on Y as well as on X chromosome and even autosomal chromosome. However the genetical localization of the H-Y structural gene remains unknown. We analysed the expression of H-Y antigen in three types of sexual dysgenesis (males bearing XX caryotype, testicular feminization syndrome and one case of hermaphroditism) to clarify the function and the genetics of this antigen.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The binding capacity for H-Y antigen was studied in various rat tissues of both sexes. In nongonadal tissues (liver, kidney, brain, epidermis) binding could not be demonstrated. In contrast, the gonads are able to bind exogenously supplied H-Y antigen. In the ovary, the binding capacity remains unchanged in newborn and adult animals, while in the testis, this capacity decreases with age. A receptor like that of a proteohormone is assumed to exist in the gonads but not in other tissues. In nongonadal tissues, H-Y antigen apparently is present only if the cell itself synthesizes the antigen. The H-Y antigen receptor of the gonads is not sex-specific. Thus, the primary sex differentiation depends on whether H-Y antigen is synthesized in the organism.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The H-Y antigen status was determined in nine transsexual patients. Our results indicate that sexual behaviour is independent of H-Y antigen constitution, in fact all male-to-female transsexual patients typed as H-Y antigen positive, and the female-to-male transsexual patients were H-Y antigen negative.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Human male erythrocytes absorb H-Y antiserum while those of human females do not. Studies on the mode of attachment of H-Y antigen to the erythrocyte membrane reveal: (1) After several washes H-Y antigen can only be removed from male erythrocytes and not from other male cells such as granulocytes. (2) Female erythrocytes absorb exogenous H-Y antigen and thus become H-Y positive. (3) Complement mediated lysis of erythrocytes by H-Y antiserum is not sex specific but is dependent on the AB0 blood group type of the red blood cells. It is concluded that H-Y antigen is unspecifically attached to red blood cells and is therefore not an integral part of the erythrocyte membrane.This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 46 and Si 185/4)  相似文献   

13.
Summary Male-specific H-Y antigen may be defined by graft rejection, killer cell action or antibodies. Most commonly H-Y antigen is detected in assays using H-Y antisera. In these tests errors may arise from various causes: 1) Auto- and heteroantibodies cross-reacting with target cells. 2) Restriction phenomena. 3) MHC-dependent modification of the amount of H-Y antigen present on different tissues. 4) Modification of cell surface antigens by bacteria or viruses.Regarding the third definition of H-Y antigen, four different states can be distinguished in the mammalian male. H-Y occurs (1) as an integral part of the plasma membrane; (2) unspecifically attached to the membrane of human erythrocytes; (3) free in solution; (4) bound to its gonad-specific receptor.Redistribution experiments suggest that H-Y and 2-m are associated on the cell membrane. Coredistribution is not found of H-Y and MHC antigens. An antibody blocking technique demonstrates association of H-Y and H-2D antigens on unfixed lymphoid, but not on testicular cells. Human erythrocytes lacking 2-m do not integrate H-Y antigen into the cell membrane. Male erythrocytes, however, absorb H-Y antigen from the serum. The origin of H-Y antigen in the serum is not clear. It may be shed from cell membranes, derive from the testis which actively secretes H-Y antigen, or both.H-Y antigen is bound by a gonad-specific receptor. This receptor is present in the gonads of both sexes. H-Y antigen is supposed to mediate testis differentiation via this receptor. Reaggregation experiments in vitro using dissociated gonads of the newborn rat demonstrate that ovarian cells reorganize into testicular structures in the presence of H-Y antigen. The assumption cannot be confirmed that addition of H-Y antiserum to testicular cells results in ovarian structures. This finding, however, does not conflict with the view that H-Y antigen is involved in testis differentiation, e.g. by inducing testis cell-specific functions via the gonad-specific receptor.  相似文献   

14.
Summary In a very strict sense, the primary (gonadal) sex of mammals is determined not so much by the presence or absence of the Y but the expression or nonexpression of the evolutionary extremely conserved plasma membrane H-Y antigen. The central somatic blastema of embryonic indifferent gonads contains one cell lineage characterized by the possession of S−F differentiation antigen that differentiates into testicular Sertoli cells in the presence of H-Y and into ovarian follicular (granulosa) cells in its absence. This cell lineage appears to play the most critical role in gonadal differentiation. Whether or not testicular Leydig cells and ovarian theca cells are similarly derived from the common cell lineage has not been determined. Nevertheless, if given H-Y antigen, presumptive theca-cell precursors of the fetal ovary acquire hCG (LH?)-receptors—the characteristic of fetal Leydig cells. Presented in the formal symposium on Sexual Differentiation in Vitro and in Vivo at the 29th Annual Meeting of the Tissue Culture Association, Denver, Colorado, June 4–8, 1978. This work was supported by Contract NO1-CB-33907, and Grants No. 1 RO1 AG00042 and No. 5 RO1 CA16952 from the National Institutes of Health.  相似文献   

15.
H-Y antigen, presumably the product of mammalian testis-determining genes, has been detected in three species of teleost fish, Xiphophorus maculatus, Haplochromis burtoni , and Oryzias latipes , and in hybrids of the genus Tilapia . In X. maculatus H-Y was most readily detected in YY males, suggesting that a genetic determinant of H-Y antigen expression may exist on the teleost Y-chromosome. Although H-Y was detected in males and not in females in each of the species that we studied, male heterogamety has not been firmly established for H. burtoni . Thus despite the extreme phlyogenetic conservation of H-Y genes and their association with the Y-chromosome, it remains open to question whether H-Y will always be found in the heterogametic sex, and whether serologically defined H-Y antigen plays any part in the differentiation of the teleost gonad.  相似文献   

16.
H-Y antigen, presumably the product of mammalian testis-determining genes, has been detected in three species of teleost fish, Xiphophorus maculatus. Haplochromis burtoni, and Oryzias latipes, and in hybrids of the genus Tilapia. In X. maculatus H-Y was most readily detected in YY males, suggesting that a genetic determinant of H-Y antigen expression may exist on the teleost Y-chromosome. Although H-Y was detected in males and not in feamles in each of the species that we studied, male heterogamety has not been firmly established for H. burtoni. Thus despite the extreme phlyogenetic conservation of H-Y genes and their association with the Y-chromosome, it remains open to question whether H-Y will always be found in the heterogametic sex, and whether serologically defined H-Y antigen plays any part in the differentiation of the teleost gonad.  相似文献   

17.
With the use of mixed-hemadsorption-hybrid-antibody (MHA-HA) test, H-Y antigen was studied on neonatal testicular cells and fractionated testicular cells from young mice (4–6 weeks old). H-Y antigen was undetectable on spermatogonia cells from neonatal testes but became fully expressed on late spermatids. Our data suggested that there was postmeiotic expression of H-Y antigen.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Summary Presence of H-Y antigen has been correlated with testicular differentiation, and absence of H-Y with failure of testicular differentiation, in a variety of mammalian species. To determine more precisely the relationship between expression of H-Y antigen and development of the testis, we studied the cells of phenotypic females with the 46,XY male karyotype. Blood leukocytes were typed H-Y+ in five XY females with gonadal dysgenesis, although in other studies blood leukocytes from XY females with gonadal dysgenesis were typed H-Y-. Thus mere presence of H-Y antigen is not sufficient to guarantee normal differentiation of the testis. In the present paper we review evidence for an additional factor in gonadal organogenesis, the H-Y antigen receptor. We infer that testicular development requires engagement of H-Y and its receptor. It follows that XY gonadal dysgenesis is the consequence of functional absence of the H-Y testis inducer as in the following conditions: failure of synthesis of H-Y or failure of specific binding of H-Y.  相似文献   

20.
Ulrich Wolf 《Human genetics》1979,47(3):269-277
Summary H-Y antigen was determined in 12 patients affected by XY gonadal dysgenesis. Of these, three proved to be H-Y negative, and nine, including two sisters, were H-Y positive; two of the unrelated positive cases exhibited a reduced antigen titer. Therefore, this clinical condition must be genetically heterogeneous. It is assumed that in the negative cases and possibly in those with reduced antigen titer, the H-Y generating system is affected by mutation, while in the regular positive cases the target cells are unable to respond due to a defect of the gonad-specific H-Y antigen receptor.I dedicate this article to the memory of Ilse Aschmoneit  相似文献   

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