Developments in Brief : Researchers Uncover Genetic Clue in Men Born With Female Chromosomes
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Genetics researchers have found new evidence that may explain why some babies born with female chromosomes become male anyway. Normally, babies who inherit an X and a Y chromosome become male and those with two X chromosomes become female.
But about one in every 20,000 male babies has two X chromosomes. “They are male in every sense of the word, but they are sterile,” said David C. Page, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who reported on the finding in the current issue of Nature, a British science journal.
“It looks like whether an embryo becomes male or female is determined by a very small part of the Y chromosome,” Page said. “People have been pondering sex determination since ancient times, and it’s here on this very small area of a chromosome. When we look at the two X chromosomes in these males we clearly find that there is Y chromosomal material on one of the X chromosomes. We can assume the sex-determining gene is found in that small area of Y chromosomal material” that is attached to the X chromosome.
“It’s a long way from understanding to being able to control,” he said. “But it’s helpful to understand genes and how they work.”