Y chromosome isn't going extinct after all
CBC News
Posted: Feb 23, 2012 10:53 AM ET
Last Updated: Feb 23, 2012 11:45 AM ET
Related
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
The size difference between the X and Y chromosome can be seen in an image of the whole chromosome set for a human male. (National Human Genome Research Institute/Wikimedia Commons)The popular theory that the Y chromosome is well on its way to losing all its genes is wrong, a new study suggests.
"Our empirical data fly in the face of the other theories out there," said Jennifer Hughes, lead author of the study, in a statement. "It's clear the Y isn't going anywhere."
Hughes, a biology researcher at the Massachussets Institute of Technology, and her colleagues, published their findings online in the journal Nature Wednesday.
The "rotting Y" theory is based on the fact that the tiny human Y chromosome, found just in males, has lost about 97 per cent of the 600 genes it once shared with the bigger, beefier human X chromosome, which is found in both males and females. The paired chromosomes were once identical and regularly traded genes with one another like the other 22 pairs of human chromosomes. But larger and larger sections of the X and Y stopped that kind of swapping starting around 300 million years ago, and the Y began losing genes.
David Page, director of the Whitehead Institute at MIT and a co-author of the new paper, said the rotting Y theory went viral and is now so pervasive that he can't give a public talk without being asked about it.
Hughes, Page and their colleagues decided to test the theory by comparing human and chimpanzee Y chromosomes with the Y chromosome of the rhesus macaque, a monkey that shared a common ancestor with humans 25 million years ago.
They found that all 18 genes on the oldest portions of the chromosome, which were inherited from that common ancestor, remained on the Y chromosome of both species — that is, they have remained stable for 25 million years. In a slightly newer part of the chromosome that formed about 30 million years ago, one gene has been lost in humans since they split from rhesus monkeys. All other differences between the Y chromosomes in the two species arose in the past 25 million years.
"The Y was in free fall early on, and genes were lost at an incredibly rapid rate," Page acknowledged in a statement. "But then it levelled off, and it's been doing just fine since."
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Canada expels all remaining Syrian diplomats
- Canada is expelling all Syrian diplomats remaining in Ottawa to protest the latest escalation in violence against civilians by the Assad regime. more »
- Canadian climber's body taken off Everest
- The body of a Toronto woman who died while descending from the summit of Mount Everest earlier this month has been taken by helicopter to her family in the Nepalese capital of Kathmandu. more »
- RCMP commissioner pledges to rid force of 'bad apples'
- The RCMP's disciplinary process is so bureaucratic and out of date that "bad apples" end up staying on the force long after they should be thrown out, RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson says in a remarkably frank open letter to Canadians. more »
- Ottawa set to shut down hearing on F-35 jet purchase
- The federal government appears set to shut down the only public investigation into Ottawa's fumbling of the F-35 fighter jet purchase. more »
- 'Engine shutdown' forced Air Canada jet to land
- Evolution skeptics will soon be silenced by science: Richard Leakey
- Richard Branson suggests naked kitesurfing to premier
- RCMP commissioner pledges to rid force of 'bad apples'
- Newly discovered malware most lethal cyberweapon to date
- Thunder Bay flooding causes state of emergency
- New Italian earthquake death toll rises to 10
- Canadian climber's body taken off Everest
- Syrian children were executed, UN says
