S'identifier

The Y chromosome is a sex chromosomefound in several vertebrates and mammals, including humans. In addition to 22 pairs of autosomes, the human males have one X chromosome and one Y chromosome. In these organisms, the presence or absence of the Y chromosome determines the development of male traits.

Evolution

Around 300 million years ago, the two sex chromosomes diverged from two identical autosomal chromosomes. Over time, the Y chromosome has lost most of its genes, shrinking in size. Today, only a small part of the Y chromosome shares sequence similarity with the X chromosome. A large scientific study on Y chromosomes in eight mammals, including monkeys, mice, rats, bulls, opossums, chimpanzees, and humans, showed 18 highly similar regions on Y chromosomes. The fact that these regions are retained in all these mammals, despite losing a large portion of Y chromosomes during evolution, shows that the genes on Y chromosomes are vital for the survival of these mammals.

Structure

The mammalian Y chromosome has three major regions. The pseudoautosomal regions on the Y chromosome share homology with the X chromosome and can undergo meiotic recombination. Thus, genes present in the pseudoautosomal regions are inherited in an autosomal rather than a sex-linked fashion. The second region is a euchromatin region designated as a Male-specific Y chromosome region or MSY. It spans 23 Mb in length and has few protein-coding genes, such as the SRY gene, a master regulator of maleness and the ZFY gene required for spermatogenesis. The third region is a heterochromatin region that contains several repetitive sequences.

Mutations and their effects

Deletions in the MSY region of the Y chromosome affect sperm development and cause male sterility. For example, deletions in the AZF gene on the long arm of the Y chromosome lead to a condition called azoospermia, where spermatozoa are not found in male ejaculate. In addition, deletions in specific regions of MSY are associated with testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs).

Tags

Y ChromosomeSex ChromosomeAutosomesX ChromosomeMale TraitsEvolutionGenesSequence SimilarityStudyMammalsPseudoautosomal RegionsMeiotic RecombinationMSY RegionSRY Gene

Du chapitre 12:

article

Now Playing

12.14 : The Y Chromosome Determines Maleness

Génétique mendélienne

6.4K Vues

article

12.1 : Échiquier de Punnett

Génétique mendélienne

11.7K Vues

article

12.2 : croisement monohybride

Génétique mendélienne

7.5K Vues

article

12.3 : Croisement d'hybrides

Génétique mendélienne

5.2K Vues

article

12.4 : Croisements tri-hybrides

Génétique mendélienne

22.5K Vues

article

12.5 : Loi de l'indépendance de la transmission des caractères

Génétique mendélienne

5.3K Vues

article

12.6 : Test du Chi-carré

Génétique mendélienne

33.2K Vues

article

12.7 : Analyse généalogique

Génétique mendélienne

12.0K Vues

article

12.8 : Traits d’allèles multiples

Génétique mendélienne

8.3K Vues

article

12.9 : Dominance incomplète

Génétique mendélienne

19.0K Vues

article

12.10 : Allèles létaux

Génétique mendélienne

11.7K Vues

article

12.11 : Caractères polygéniques

Génétique mendélienne

4.1K Vues

article

12.12 : Les prédispositions génétique et l’environnement affecte le phénotype

Génétique mendélienne

6.4K Vues

article

12.13 : Chromosomes X et Y

Génétique mendélienne

17.8K Vues

article

12.15 : Le ratio du chromosome X sur les autosomes

Génétique mendélienne

8.3K Vues

See More

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.