Ch. 4: Sex Determination
Examples of environmental sex determination
(Crepidula fornicata [ slipper limpet], turtles, crocodiles, alligators, some birds) (ZZ-ZW bearded dragon lizards when eggs are incubated at high temps ZZ become phenotypic females)
Examples of genic sex determination
(some plants, fungi, protozoans, fish)
The role of sex chromosomes
1. X chromosome contains genetic info essential for both sexes; one X always required 2. male-determining gene located on Y chromosome. single copy of this chromosome usually produces a male phenotype 3. absence of Y chromosome usually results in female phenotype 4. Genes affecting fertility are located on the X and Y chromosomes. female usually needs at least two copies of X chromosome to be fertile 5. additional copies of X chromosome may upset normal development in both males and females
Mechanism of random inactivation
1. cell somehow assesses the number of X chromosomes present 2. one X chromosome is selected to become the active X chromosome and all others are silenced
Poly-X females
1/1000 female births; no distinctive features; tend to be tall and thin for Triple-X syndrome; severity of intellectual disability increases as the number of X chromosomes goes beyond
Evolution of the Y chromosome
A mutation of a gene on one chromosome causes maleness, mutations at other genes affect male characteristics, suppression of crossing over keeps genes for male traits linked to male-determining gene, over time lack of crossing over bw the X and Y chromosomes leads to degeneration of the Y
What does the chromosome theory of heredity state?
Genes are located on the chromosomes, which serve as vehicles for the segregation of genes in meiosis
How do genes in the pseudoautosomal regions of sex chromosomes behave?
Genes in these regions are homologous and exhibit autosomal patterns of inheritance rather than the sex-linked inheritance seen for most genes on X and Y chromosomes
How do chromosomal, genic, and environmental sex determination differ?
In chromosomal sex determination--males and females have chromosomes that are distinguishable. In genic sex determination, sex is determined by genes, but the chromosomes of males and females are indistinguishable. In environmental sex determination, sex is determined fully or in part by environmental effects
Z-linked characteristics
In organisms with ZZ-ZW sex determination, males are the homogametic sex (ZZ) and carry two sex-linked alleles; males may be homozygous or heterozygous; females are the heterogametic sex (ZW) and possess only a single Z-linked allele
How is dosage compensation achieved in placental mammals?
In placental mammals, dosage compensation is accomplished by the random inactivation of one X chromosome in the cells of females
How is sex determined in humans (XX-XY)
Sex determining region Y (SRY) gene on the Y chromosome determines maleness
How is sex determined in reptiles?
The sexual phenotype is affected by temperature during embryonic development (turtles, warmer temps = females but alligators cooler temps = females)
How is sex determined in fruit flies? (XX-XY)
X : A ratio (X=number of X chromosomes, A = number of haploid sets of autosomal chromosomes)
Where is the gene for the androgen receptor located?
X-chromosome (always inherited from mothers)
examples of X-linked characteristics
X-linked white eye in Drosophila, X-linked color blindness
Turner syndrome
XO; 1/3000 female births; underdeveloped secondary sex characteristics; women are short with low hairline, broad chest, folds of skin on the neck; sterile
XX-XO System (grasshoppers, insects)
XX = female, XO = male (O signifies the absence of a sex chromosome); sex of an organism is determined by which type of male gamete fertilizes the egg
XX-XY System (mammals, some plants, many insects, amphibians, reptiles)
XX=female, XY=male (male is heterogametic sex, female is homogametic sex)
Klinefelter syndrome
XXY, XXXY, XXXXY, XXYY; 1/1000 male births; men have small testes and reduced facial and pubic hair; often taller than normal, sterile
What molecule aids in X-inactivation?
Xist an RNA molecule aids in X-inactivation
ZZ-ZW System (birds, snakes, butterflies, some amphibians, some fishes)
ZZ = male, ZW = female female is heterogametic, male is homogametic; female always inherits W from her mother
Misconceptions of Sex-Linked Characteristics
a characteristic in which males and females differ is sex linked (many autosomal characteristics that differ bw the sexes can be due to the influence of sex hormone on expression of autosomal genes); a characteristic found more frequently in one sex is sex linked
How does the SRY gene determine maleness in human development?
all humans possess undifferentiated gonads and both male and female reproductive ducts; after 6 weeks after fertilization, gene on the Y chromosome becomes active and causes human embryo to develop as a male and in the absence of this gene, a human embryo develops as a female
sexual reproduction
alternates between haploid and diploid states
Mechanism of sex determination in fruit flies
although the sexual phenotype of a fruit fly is predicted by the X:A ratio, sex is actually determined by genes on the X chromosome
hermaphroditism
both sexes are present in the same organism
X-linked characteristics
characteristics determined by a gene or genes on the X chromosome; most sex-linked characteristics are X linked
Y-linked characteristics
characteristics determined by a gene or genes on the Y chromosome; traits which are only present in males and always inherited from the father (all male offspring of a male with a Y-linked trait will display the trait)
sex-linked characteristics
characteristics determined by genes located on the sex chromosomes
How can sex be determined among dioecious species?
chromosomally, genetically, or environmentally
Barr bodies
condensed, darkly staining bodies in the nuclei of cells that are inactive X chromosomes for placental mammals (regardless of how many X's only one is active)
How is dosage compensation achieved in fruit flies?
doubling the activity of the genes on the X chromosome of males but not of females
dosage compensation
equalization in males and females of the amount of protein produced by X-linked genes since having too few or too much protein can be detrimental during development
What is fundamental difference in males and females?
gamete size
heterogametic sex
gametes of this sex have different sex chromosomes
homogametic sex
gametes of this sex have the same sex chromosomes
Androgen-insensitivity sydrome
genotype = XY; androgen receptor is defective in females with androgen insensitivity syndrome so their cells are insensitive to testosterone; women with androgen-insensitivity syndrome have female external sexual characteristics and internalized teses
What does androgen-insensitivity syndrome illustrate about the influence of genes on a person's sex?
human sexual development is influenced by other genes in addition to SRY gene on Y chromosome; most people carry genes for both male and female characteristics; key to maleness and femaleness lies not in genes but in the control of their expression
Lyon Hypothesis
hypothesis proposes one X chromosome in each female cell becomes inactivated and suggests that the X chromosome that gets inactivated is random and varies from cell to cell
hemizygous
males cannot be either homozygous or heterozygous for X-linked loci
sex determination
mechanism by which sex is established
What process causes the genetic variation seen in offspring produced by sexual reproduction?
meiosis
Random X-inactivation
neighboring cells tend to have the same X chromosomes tend to have the same X chromosome inactivated, producing a patchy pattern (mosaic) for the expression of an X-linked characteristic in heterozygous
autosomes
nonsex chromosomes
YY
not viable (lethal--need at least one X)
SRY gene
on the y chromosome, a gene that triggers male development
monoecious
organisms that bear both male and female reproductive structures
sex
refers to sexual phenotype (most organisms only have 2) **sometimes an organisms has chromosomes or genes normally associated with one sex but an anatomy corresponding to the opposite sex
What determines sex in chromosomal sex-determining and genic sex determining systems?
sex is controlled by individual genes (difference is with chromosomal sex determination, the sex chromosomes also look different in males and females)
genic sex determination
sex is determined by genes at one or more loci; sex is genetically determined but there are no obvious differences in the chromosomes of males and females i.e. there are no sex chromosomes
How is sex determined for slipper limpets?
sex is determined environmentally by the limpet's position in the stack
environmental sex determination
sex is determined fully or in part by environmental factors; sometimes environmental factors can override chromosomal sex determination
pseudoautosomal region
small regions where sex chromosomes are homologous and allows them to pair (since S and Y chromosomes aren't homologous) *located at the tips of the X and Y chromosomes
dioecious
species in which the organism has either male or female reproductive structures (ex. humans)
sex chromosomes
the chromosomes which determine sex in organisms that differ between males and females
Example of X-inactivation
tortoiseshell and calico cats
sequential hermaphroditism
type of sexual development in which each individual animal can be both male and female, although not simultaneously
nondisjunction
when chromosomes fail to separate in anaphase I of meiosis