Meiotic studies in mice carrying the sex reversal (Sxr) factor
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Cytogenetic and Genome Research
- Vol. 21 (1-2) , 11-18
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000130874
Abstract
A sex reversal factor (Sxr) that causes mice having apparently normal X chromosomes to become phenotypically male is transmitted in an autosomal pattern. The origin of the Sxr factor is still unknown. It seems most likely that it has originated from an autosomal gene mutation or is the result of a translocation of part of the Y chromosome to one of the autosomes. Chromosomes from four XY and six XO mice carrying this sex reversal factor were examined in the diakinesis stage of meiosis. The following unusual observations were noted: (1) in XY males carrying the Sxr factor, the X and Y chromosomes were separated more often than in controls. (2) The Y chromosome tends to be closer to an autosome when the X and Y are separate than when the X and Y are attached. (3) A chromosome fragment was present in 4/226 cells from two XO males and a single cell from an XY, Sxr carrier. Although there is no direct evidence, these observations seem to favor the possibility that the Sxr factor involves a chromosomal rearrangement rather than a single gene mutation.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Serologic Detection of a Y-Linked Gene in XX Males and XX True HermaphroditesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1976