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Fundamental Genetics

Lecture 5

Sex Determination and


Sex Chromosomes

John Donnie A. Ramos, Ph.D.


Dept. of Biological Sciences
College of Science
University of Santo Tomas

Types of Sexually
Reproducing Organisms
‰ Monoecious organisms
‰ produces two types of gametes in 1 organism (sperm cells
and egg cells)
‰ Bisexual / hermaprhroditic
‰ Dioecious organisms
‰ Produces only 1 type of gamete in 1 organism (either
sperm cells or egg cells)
‰ Unisexual / gonochoric
‰ Organism is either male or female
‰ Intersex - intermediate sexual differentiation (often sterile)

“Genetics is concerned with the differences of


dioecious organisms and how is the
mechanism of inheritance of these two types.”

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Life Cycle of Clamydomonas
‰ Green alga
‰ Infrequent sexual
reproduction
‰ Isogamous organisms
‰ Primitive means of sexual
differentiation

Life Cycle of Zea mays

‰ Monoecious plant
‰ Alternating gametophyte and sporophyte stages

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Life Cycle of C. elegans
‰ Hermaphroditic nematode
‰ Two sexual phenotypes
‰ Male – with testes
‰ Hermaphrodites –
testes and ovaries
‰ Genetic signal for
maleness is determined by
X chromosome anf
autosomes
‰ No Y chromosome
‰ Hermaphrodites = XX
‰ Male = X
‰ Ratio of X chrom to
autosomes determines sex
of the individual
‰ 1.0 = hermaphrodites
‰ 0.5 = males

X and Y Chromosomes

XX-XO system XX-XY system


‰ Male is heterogametic sex while female is homogametic sex
‰ Birds, some reptiles, moths, butterflies, some fishes and
amphibinas = ZZ/ZW system where ZZ=male while ZW=females
(male is homogametic while female is heterogametic)

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Sex Determination in Humans
Spermatogenesis Oogenesis

44+XY 44+XX
Spermatogonium Oogonium

44+XY 44+XX
Primary Spermatocyte Primary Oocyte

22+X 22+Y 22+X 22+X


Secondary Spermatocyte Secondary Oocyte 1st polar body

22+X 22+X 22+Y 22+Y 22+X 22+X 22+X 22+X


Spermatozoa Ovum 2nd Polar Bodies
1/4 1/4 1/4 1/4 100 %

2/4 or ½ or 50% 2/4 or ½ or 50%

Fertilization
During fertilization, an egg (X-bearing) has an equal chance
of being fertilized by an X-bearing sperm or a Y-bearing
sperm.
Sperm Egg Sperm Egg
22+X 22+X 22+Y 22+X

50% or 0.5 100% or 1.0 50% or 0.5 100% or 1.0

Zygote Zygote

44+XX 44+XY

0.5 or 50% 0.5 or 50%


(0.5)(1.0)= 0.5 (0.5)(1.0)= 0.5

50-50% of producing a male or female offpring

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Sex Ratio in Humans
‰ Primary Sex Ratio (proportion of males and females conceived in a
population)
‰ Secondary Sex Ratio (proportion of each sex that is born)

‰ Why birth rate of male is higher than female? (US survey on birth rate:
Male=0.52 while females=0.48)
‰ Y bearing sperm is more motile (?)
‰ XY fetus has higher viability than XX fetus

‰ Why more females in than males in actual populations? (ranges from 1:2
to 1:5)
‰ Males have higher mortality rate than females

‰ Implication of equal chances of producing male or female


offspring:
‰ Can predict the number of males and females in a family through
binomial distribution (m+f)n where n is the number of children.

Sex Chromosomes in Humans


‰ X chromosome
‰ Submetacentric
‰ Size between 7-8 groups
‰ Approximately 5.0-5.5 µm
in length
‰ With satellites

‰ Y chromosome
‰ Acroncentric
‰ Slightly longer than group
G chromosomes
‰ 2 µm in length
‰ Has no satellites

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Sex Differentiation in Humans
‰ Genetic Sex
‰ Males = XY while females = XX
‰ Gonodal Sex (5th week)
‰ XY embryo will produce testes (medulla) while XX embryo will produce
ovary (cortex)
‰ If the cell contains XY sex chromosomes, it will develop testes at 7th
week it not ovary develops)
‰ Oogonia develops at 12th week, and by 25th week all primary oocytes
have been produced and arrested at GO (remain dormant until
puberty
‰ Prior to this stage, embryo is hermaphroditic
‰ Genital Sex
‰ Secondary sex organs (external genitalia) and hormones
‰ Somatic Sex
‰ Production of secondary sex characters (effect of hormones)
‰ Nuclear Sex
‰ Males – Barr body negative
‰ Females – Barr body positive
‰ Sociophysiological sex
‰ Influence of culture

Sex Chromosome Abnormalities


‰ Klinefelter Syndrome
‰ 2n=47 (XXY sex chromosomes)
‰ Occurs in 2 every 1000 male
births
‰ Male genitalia and ducts
‰ Rudimentary testes (fail to
produce sperm) = sterile
‰ Tall and long arms and legs
‰ Large hands and feet
‰ Slight enlargement of breast
(gynecomastia)
‰ Rounded hips
‰ Below normal IQ
‰ Other forms: 48, XXXY; 48,XXYY;
49XXXXY; 49XXXYY

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Sex Chromosome Abnormalities
‰ Turner Syndrome
‰ 2n=45 (X sex chromosome)
‰ Occurs in 1 every 2000
female births
‰ Most die in utero
‰ Female external genitalia
‰ Rudimentary ovary (sterile)
‰ Short stature, stocky,
(usually under 5 ft)
‰ Webbing neck (Skin flaps on
the back of neck)
‰ Flat chested
(Underdeveloped breasts)
‰ Broad, shieldlike chest
‰ Low IQ

Sex Chromosome Abnormalities

‰ Metafemale, Poly X females


‰ 2n=47 (XXX)
‰ Genetically female
‰ Occurs in 1 every 1200 female births
‰ Some are perfectly normal
‰ Other cases, undeveloped secondary sexual
characteristics leading sterility
‰ Mental retardation
‰ Rare cases: 48 (XXXX); 49 (XXXXX)

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Sex Chromosome Abnormalities
‰ Jacobs Syndrome (Criminal Syndrome)
‰ 2n=47 (XYY)
‰ Phenotypically male
‰ First studied by Patricia Jacobs (1965)
‰ 9 out of 315 males in the Scottish maximum security prison
‰ Significantly above average in height (above 6 ft)
‰ Antisocial (nonviolent) behaviors, personality disorders
‰ High percentage have higher IQ (7/9)

Sex Chromosome Abnormalities


‰ Hermaphroditism
‰ Individuals with both testicular and ovarian tissues
‰ Ambigous external genitalia
‰ Often musculinized
‰ Generally sterile (underdeveloped organs)
‰ Variable cases: (US study of 100 cases)
‰ 59 XX
‰ 21 XY
‰ 28 mosaics (XXY, XXX, etc.)

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Other Causes of Sexual Abnormalities
‰ Attached X flies
‰ Observed in fruit flies only
‰ 2 X chromosomes are physically attached (inability to
segregate during anaphase)
‰ Will result to metafemales
‰ Polyploidy
‰ More than 2 sets of chromosomes
‰ Transformer genes
‰ Autosomal genes that affect the sex of the individual
‰ Identified in Drosophila
‰ Gynandromorphs
‰ Condition wherein ½ of the organism is male and the other
half is female
‰ Male part contains XY chromosomes while female parts
contain XX chromosomes

The Y Chromosome in Humans


‰ Contains Psuedoautosomal Regions (PAR) on
both ends
‰ Share DNA sequence homology with X
chromosome (making them pair during meiosis)
‰ 5 Nonrecombining region of the Y (NRY) –
remainder of the chromosome
‰ Mainly Heterochromatic (devoid of structural
genes)
‰ 7 genes without homology to other chromosomes
‰ Contains genes coding for Testes-Determining
Factor (TFD)-proteins responsible for
differentiatiation of gonodal tissue to become
testes
‰ SRY gene (sex-determining region Y)-studied
using transgenic mice
‰ Abnormal cases:
‰ Males without Y (XX) but contains SRY gene
on one of the X
‰ Females with Y chromosomes but absence of
SRY gene

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Dosage Compensation for X
Chromosomes in Females
‰ Females can produce twice gene products for genes located in the X
chromosomes (could lead to abnormalities)
‰ Dosage compensation = mechanism employed to prevent over-
expression
‰ Barr Bodies (Chromatin Bodies)
‰ Inactivated X chromosome on the periphery of the nucleus
‰ Follows N-1 rule where N is the number of X chromosomes

Dosage Compensation for X


Chromosomes in Females
‰ If only 1 X chromosome is active, why are abnormalities
observed?
‰ X chromosome does not occur in early development of
embryo (before sex differentiation)
‰ Not all Barr bodies are inactivated

‰ The Lyon Hypothesis


‰ Inactivation of X chromosomes occur randomly in somatic
cells
‰ Once inactivated, all daughter cells exhibit inactivated X
chromosomes
‰ Controlled by a gene called X-inactivation Center (XIC)

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Sex Determination In Drosophila
‰ Follows XY-XX system
‰ 2n=8 (6 autosomes and XY or XX sex
chromosomes)
‰ First studies by Calvin Bridges (1916)
‰ Y chromosome does not determine sexes
(unlike in humans)
‰ Ratio of X chromosome and the autosomes
determines sex in Drosophila
‰ Based on initial findings that XXY flies are
females while XO flies are males but are
sterile.
‰ Studied triploid females (3n) = result of
fertilization of diploid (2n) egg and haploid
(n) sperm

Sex Determination In Drosophila


‰ Ratio of number of X chromosomes and
number of sets of chromosomes
present determines the sex
‰ Ratio of 1 = Female (fertile)
‰ Ratio above 1 = metafemale (sterile)
‰ Ratio between 0.5 to 1.0 = Intersex
(invariably sterile, exhibit both male anf
female morphology)
‰ Ratio of 0.5 = Male (fertile)
‰ Ratio below 0.5 = Metamale (sterile)
‰ Determined by Genetic Balance Theory
‰ Genes involved:
‰ Tra gene –transformer (autosomal
gene)
‰ Sxl gene – sex lethal gene
‰ Dxl gene – double sex gene

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Sex Determination In Reptiles
‰ Follows ZZ/ZW system where ZZ are males and ZW are females
‰ Sex determination is affected by temperature (incubation
temperature of egg)
‰ Varies with different species
‰ Three observed patterns:

Low T=males Low T=females Low & high T = females


High T = females High T = males Intermediate T = males

‰ Tp = pivotal temperature; FT = female-determining temperature;


MT= male-determining temperature
‰ Tp is narrow (1-5°C)
‰ Hormones are mainly affected (androgens and estrogens)
‰ Aromatase=converts androgens to estrogens

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