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1.
Eleven Y-specific DNA probes hybridizing with DNA from one or more 46,XX males were isolated from a recombinant phage DNA library constructed from flow sorted human Y chromosomes. Two probes hybridized with DNA from nine out of eleven, i.e. greater than 80% of these 46,XX males. The relative frequency of hybridization of the probes in the 46,XX males and in a 46,X,dic(Y) female, together with in situ hybridization data, allowed mapping of the probes on Yp in relation to a putative testis determining locus. Several of those probes were also absent in a 46,XY female, further refining a model for ordering the probes on Yp. The DNA of one XX male hybridized both with probes from Yp and probes from proximal Yq (excluding the pericentral region). This suggests that complex translocations may occur into the DNA of 46,XX males that involve not only parts of Yp but also parts of Yq.  相似文献   

2.
Y-chromosomal rearrangements, a common cause of sex reversal in man, frequently occur between two blocks of repeated DNA. Both blocks are composed of 20-kb tandemly repeated Y-chromosome-specific DNA sequences. They are located in the proximal portion of the Y short arm on a NotI restriction fragment of approximately 5.3 Mb and on an MluI fragment of approximately 5.5 Mb. Chromosome breaks positioned between the two blocks were detected in two of three 46,XY females with deletions of Yp and in five of six 46,XX males positive for the repeat sequences. The rearranged NotI fragments in the 46,XX males were 4.4 Mb and the MluI fragments were 2.0 Mb in length. This indicates that breaks occur within a small region of Yp defined by the two blocks of specific repeated DNA sequences. The region between the two blocks thus appears to be a focus of structural lability in the human Y chromosome.  相似文献   

3.
Variable transfer of Y-specific sequences in XX males.   总被引:19,自引:5,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
A series of twelve XX males and their relatives have been examined by Southern blot analysis with fourteen different Y recombinants. The pattern of Y sequences present shows considerable variation between XX males. Furthermore, on the basis of the terminal transfer model, anomalous patterns of Y sequences are evident in certain XX males in that sequences located as proximal Yp by means of a Y deletion panel are found to be present in the absence of distal sequences. These anomalies can be resolved by proposing that the order of Yp sequences varies in the population in the form of inversion polymorphisms in the Y chromosomes of normal males. Alternatively, it is necessary to invoke multiple recombination events between the X and Y chromosomes to explain the patterns of Y sequences in these XX males. Southern analysis on DNA prepared from flow sorted X chromosomes of XX males indicates that the Y sequences in these patients are linked to X chromosomes.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
We have used pulsed-field gel electrophoresis to study the short arm of the Y chromosome by using a pseudoautosomal probe (MIC2Y) and adjacent Y-specific sequences 27a and 47z (DSXY5) in XX males and XY females, in order to detect chromosomal breakpoints which may have given rise to these individuals. The preliminary published long-range restriction map was used as a basis for this study. Our data confirm the reported fragment sizes and resolve some discrepancies. In addition, the recently cloned ZFY locus, pDP1007, the putative sex-determining locus, has been used to extend this long-range restriction map on Yp. Thus far, the X and Y copy of this sequence appear to have conserved GC islands around this locus, since it is found on a 280-kb fragment in males and females by using SacII, BssHII, NarI, and NotI. Only two Y-specific sequences of 50 and 70 kb have been detected at the pulsed-field level by using SfiI and NaeI, respectively. No translocation breakpoints have been detected in any of the patients studied. One XX male, GM1889, however, does not have any of the Y-specific fragments detected using conventional or pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. This is one of the few typical XX males who therefore does not have the ZFY copy of the TDF clone. Since all the other XX males hybridized to 47z, which is centromeric to ZFY, a series of DNA loci that are centromeric to 47z need to be studied in order to detect chromosomal breakpoints.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Chromosome preparations from seven subjects with aberrations of sex chromosomes were utilized for in situ hybridization studies with the tritium-labeled Y-derived probe p50f. Two subjects had a pseudodicentric chromosome consisting of two copies of Yp and a portion of Y long arm; two were XX males [46,XX,t(Xp;Yp)], one was missing part of the Y short arm, and another had t(5p;Yq); in addition cells from an XYY male as well as a normal 46,XY male, and a 46,XX female, were hybridized with the same probe. The hybridization technique of Harper and Saunders (1981) was used. There was excess labeling of the Yp/paracentromeric regions in the cases with the normal Y, the XYY, the pseudodicentric Y, and the 5/Y translocation. No significant label was seen on metaphases from the normal 46,XX female or the female with the partially missing Y short arm. Excess label was present on the X short arm in the cases of the XX males; there were 8% and 9.5% of cells with label. The combined cytogenetic and hybridization data indicate that one X short arm in these XX males has undergone a translocation with Yp, and that genes for sex determination probably reside on the distal half of the Y short arm.  相似文献   

7.
Accidental recombination between the differential segments of the X and Y chromosomes in man occasionally allows transfer of Y-linked sequences to the X chromosome leading to testis differentiation in so-called XX males. Loss of the same sequences by X-Y interchange allows female differentiation in a small proportion of individuals with XY gonadal dysgenesis. A candidate gene responsible for primary sex determination has recently been cloned from within this part of the Y chromosome by Page and his colleagues. The observation that a homologue of this gene is present on the short arm of the X chromosome and is subject to X-inactivation, raises the intriguing possibility that sex determination in man is a quantitative trait. Males have two active doses of the gonad determining gene, and females have one dose. This hypothesis has been tested in a series of XX males, XY females and XX true hermaphrodites by using a genomic probe, CMPXY1, obtained by probing a Y-specific DNA library with synthetic oligonucleotides based on the predicted amino-acid sequence of the sex-determining protein. The findings in most cases are consistent with the hypothesis of homologous gonad-determining genes, GDX and GDY, carried by the X and Y chromosomes respectively. It is postulated that in sporadic or familial XX true hermaphrodites one of the GDX loci escapes X-inactivation because of mutation or chromosomal rearrangement, resulting in mosaicism for testis and ovary-determining cell lines in somatic cells. Y-negative XX males belong to the same clinical spectrum as XX true hermaphrodites, and gonadal dysgenesis in some XY females may be due to sporadic or familial mutations of GDX.  相似文献   

8.
Four cases of XX patients with testis development are reported. The aim of this study was to describe their clinical features and to see if there was any relationship between phenotypes and the presence of Y material. Several human Y-derived sequences including the SRY probe were used to analyze the DNA of the patients. Yp material including the pseudo-autosomal region and SRY was detected. The cases reported in this study confirm that XX true hermaphrodites cannot be distinguished from XX males on the basis of their genotypes. There is no relationship between clinical and anatomical phenotypes and the presence of Y material. SRY does not warrant a complete and normal testis differentiation. Although similar in some features with Klinefelter's syndrome patients, XX males exhibit specific clinical manifestations due to the lack of Y-specific genes.  相似文献   

9.
A series of Y recombinants have been isolated from Y-specific DNA libraries and regionally located on the Y chromosome using a Y deletion panel constructed from individuals carrying structural abnormalities of the Y chromosome. Of twenty recombinants examined twelve have been assigned to Yp and eight to Yq. Five of the Yp recombinants map between Yp11.2 and Ypter and one can only be assigned to Yp. Of the former, four detect homologies on the X chromosome between Xq13 and Xq24 and the latter one between Xp22.3 and Xpter. The sixth recombinant detects autosomal homologous sequences. The six remaining Yp probes are located between Ycen and Yp11.2. One of these detects a homology on the X chromosome at Xq13-Xq24 and a series of autosomal sequences, two detect uniquely Y-specific sequences and three a complex pattern of autosomal homologies. The remaining eight recombinants have been assigned to three intervals on Yq. Of three recombinants located between Ycen and Yq11.21 two detect only Y sequences and one additional autosomal homologies. Two recombinants lie in the interval Yq11.21-Yq11-22, one of which detects only Y sequences and the other an Xp homology between Xp22.3 and Xpter. Finally, the three remaining Yq recombinants all detect autosomal homologies and are located between Yq11.22 and Yq12. The divergence between homologies on different chromosomes has been examined for three recombinants by washing Southern Blots at different levels of stringency. Additionally, Southern analysis of DNA from flow sorted chromosomes has been used to identify autosomes carrying homologies to two of the Y recombinants.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The association of nephropathy, Wilms' tumour and genital abnormalities is known as Drash syndrome. Two of these features are also seen in the WAGR (Wilms' tumour, aniridia, genito-urinary abnormalities, mental retardation) complex, known to be associated with deletions of chromosome region 11p1S. We have carried out karyotypic and molecular studies in 10 Drash patients, 5 males and 5 females. All the males had a 46XY karyotype as did 3/5 of the phenotypic females, the other two having a 46XX karyotype. One of the 46XX females also had a deletion of region 11p13–p12, the only detectable autosomal chromosome abnormality in any of the patients studied. Lymphoblastoid cell lines were prepared from 6 of the Drash patients and were used in dosage studies using a variety of DNA probes from the 11p13 region. There was no evidence of microdeletions in any patient with a normal karyotype. Because of the 46XY karyotype in phenotypic females, selected X and Y chromosome loci were analysed and all found to be normal. Although Drash syndrome is likely to be of genetic origin, there are no readily detected deletions within the 11p13 region.  相似文献   

11.
Investigation of the ZFY gene in XX true hermaphroditism and Swyer syndrome   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary Four patients with 46,XX true hermaphroditism and one patient with 46,XY pure gonadal dysgenesis (Swyer syndrome) were analyzed with a Y chromosome-derived probe that detects a specific fragment on the short arm of the Y chromosome in the putative testicle-determining region and also a fragment on the short arm of the X chromosome. Normal males and females, an individual with Turner syndrome, and patients with various causes of anomalous gonadal differentiation accompanied by cytogenetically present Y chromosome were used as controls. The Y-specific fragment was not detected in any of the persons with 46,XX true hermaphroditism. However, this fragment was positive in the 46,XY female and in all Y-bearing patients. Cytogenetic and molecular absence of the ZFY sequence in 46,XX true hermaphrodites calls for explanations other than the classic embryogenie theory. The absence of testicular differentiation in the ZFY-positive XY female evidences functionally altered sex determination or, alternatively, defective gonadal receptors.  相似文献   

12.
A 45,X male with a Yp/18 translocation   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2  
Summary A patient described as a 45,X male (Forabosco et al. 1977) was examined for the presence of Y-specific DNA by using various probes detecting restriction fragments from different regions of the Y chromosome. Positive hybridization signals were obtained for Yp fragments only. In situ hybridization with two different probes, pDP31 and the pseudoautosomal probe 113F, led to a clear assignment of the Yp sequences to the short arm of one chromosome 18. Cytogenetically, the presence of all of Yp including the Y centromere on 18p could be demonstrated replacing a segment of similar size of 18p. Thus, the Y/18 translocation chromosome is dicentric structurally, but it was shown to be monocentric functionally with the no. 18 centromere active. Gene dosage studies with the probe B74 defining a sequence at 18p11.3 demonstrated a single dose of this sequence in the patient. In agreement with these observations, the patient shows clinical signs of the 18p-syndrome. It is concluded that in XO males in general, the X is of maternal origin while the maleness is due to a de novo Y/autosome translocation derived from the father. Depending on the nature of the autosomal deficiency caused by the Y/autosome translocation, the patient may have congenital malformations.  相似文献   

13.
T A Donlon  U Müller 《Genomics》1991,10(1):51-56
Twelve DNA segments have been localized to the long arm of the Y chromosome and were assigned to three intervals by deletion mapping. Of these segments, six were from distal Yq11.23, which is supposed to contain a spermatogenesis locus. The physical mapping information was used to analyze an XX male who is positive for DNA sequences both from distal Yp and from Yq. Two of the twelve sequences from Yq (Y-198 and Y-253) were detected in this patient along with two of six short-arm segments tested. Long-range physical mapping placed Y-198 and Y-253 on a common 1100-kb BssHII fragment. In this patient, the long-arm sequences were assigned to distal Xp by in situ hybridization. The data suggest that this XX male derived from an unequal interchange between an X and an inverted Y chromosome presumed to have been present in the patient's father.  相似文献   

14.
Wild populations of Akodon azarae comprise females with a karyotype indistinguishable from that of males. These individuals were formerly assumed to be Xx, the x being an X chromosome with a deletion of most of its long arm. By using a DNA probe derived from the testis-determining region of the human Y chromosome (comprising a candidate gene for the testis-determining factor, Y-linked zinc finger [ZFY]), we demonstrate that A. azarae gonosomally variant females are XY and not Xx. The ZFY sequences in A. azarae are amplified and located in two different families of EcoRI fragments derived from Y-chromosome DNA. No rearrangement or change in the state of methylation of ZFY or ZFX (X-linked zinc finger) sequences were found in XY females. We propose that sex reversal in A. azarae may be mediated by a gene or genes other than ZFX or ZFY.  相似文献   

15.
Pf62-Y and Pf62-X is a pair of allelic Y chromosome-linked and X chromosome-linked markers, and have been used to identify YY super-males, XY males and XX females for commercial production of all-male populations in yellow catfish (Pelteobagrus fulvidraco). However, the SCAR primers used previously have only two nucleotide difference, which restricts the wide utility because of nucleotide polymorphism. In this study, a continuous 8102 bp Pf62-Y sequence and a 5362 bp Pf62-X sequence have been cloned by genome walking, and significant genetic differentiation has been revealed between the corresponding X and Y chromosome allele sequences. Moreover, three pairs of primers were designed to efficiently identify YY super-males, XY males and XX females in an artificial breeding population, and to distinguish XY males and XX females in various wild populations. Together, the three new sex-specific genetic markers develop a highly stable and efficient method for genetic sex identification and sex control application in sustainable aquaculture of all-male yellow catfish.  相似文献   

16.
Summary G- and R-banded chromosome preparations from eight of twelve 46,XX males, with no evidence of mosaicism or a free Y chromosome, were distinguished in blind trials from preparations from normal 46,XX females by virtue of heteromorphism of the short arm of one X chromosome. Photographic measurements on X chromosomes and on chromosome pair 7 in cells from twelve 46,XX males, eight 46,XX females, and four 46,XY males revealed a significant increase in the size of the p arm of one X chromosome in the group of XX males, independently characterised as being heteromorphic for Xp. No such differences were observed between X chromosomes of normal males and females or between homologues of chromosome pair 7 in all groups. The heteromorphism in XX males is a consequence of an alteration in shape (banding profile) and length of the tip of the short arm of one X chromosome, and the difference in size of the two Xp arms in these 46,XXp+ males ranged from 0.4% to 22.9%. From various considerations, including the demonstration of a Y-specific DNA fragment in DNA digests from nuclei of one of three XX males tested, it is concluded that the Xp+ chromosome is a product of Xp-Yp exchange. These exchanges are assumed to originate at meiosis in the male parent and may involve an exchange of different amounts of material. The consequences of such unequal exchange are considered in terms of the inheritance of genes located on Yp and distal Xp. No obvious phenotypic difference was associated with the presence or absence of Xp+. Thus, some males diagnosed as 46,XX are mosaic for a cryptic Y-containing cell line, and there is now excellent evidence that maleness in others may be a consequence of an autosomal recessive gene. The present data imply that in around 70% of 46,XX males, maleness is a consequence of the inheritance of a paternal X-Y interchange product.  相似文献   

17.
Actin-like sequences are present on human X and Y chromosomes.   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The human genome contains greater than 20 actin-related sequences, six of which at least are expressed as protein. We have shown by blot hybridization the presence of actin-like sequences on both the X and the Y chromosomes. These sequences can be detected in HindIII digests of genomic DNA, using as probe cDNA clones corresponding to human alpha skeletal actin or to a hamster (beta or gamma) cytoskeletal actin; they show more homology to the latter probe. The actin probes also detect a polymorphic DNA fragment showing autosomal inheritance with a frequency for the major allele of 0.55 in the population studied. The X-linked actin sequence has been assigned to a centromeric region between Xp11 and Xq11 by hybridization to DNAs from a panel of human-mouse hybrid cell lines, and thus lies outside the postulated region of homology between the X and Y chromosomes. The Y-linked actin sequence can serve as a marker to analyse anomalies of sex determination or of gametogenesis in man. It was found in all XY males studied but was absent from the genomic DNA of four unrelated 'XX male' subjects and two XX hermaphrodites. This shows that the region of chromosome Y which contains the actin sequence is not translocated onto the X chromosome (or onto autosomes) in these patients.  相似文献   

18.
The Arvicolidae is a widely distributed rodent group with several interesting characteristics in their sex chromosomes. Here, we summarize the actual knowledge of some of these characteristics. This mammalian group has species with abnormal sex determination systems. In fact, some species present the same karyotype in both males and females, with total absence of a Y chromosome, and hence of SRY and ZFY genes. Other species present fertile, sex-reversed XY females, generally due to mutations affecting X chromosomes. Furthermore, in Microtus oregoni males and females are gonosomic mosaic (the females are XO in the soma and XX in the germ cells, while the males are XY in the soma and OY in the germ cells). Regarding sex chromosomes, some species present enlarged (giant) sex chromosomes because of the presence of large blocks of constitutive heterochromatin, which have been demonstrated to be highly heterogeneous. Furthermore, we also consider the alterations affecting composition and localization of sex-linked genes or repeated sequences. Finally, this rodent group includes species with synaptic and asynaptic sex chromosomes. In fact, several species with asynaptic sex chromosomes have been described. It is interesting to note that within the genus Microtus both types of sex chromosomes are present.  相似文献   

19.
20.
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   

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