The Y - Getting a lot of attention this week, isn't it? - KWC

>From Nature: The Y chromosome - containing the genes to be a man - has been
sequenced.
For many years regarded as a genetic wasteland, the full sequence reveals
that we may have underestimated its powers
http://www.nature.com/nature/featureoftheweek/


Also, Men's Genetic Essence turns out to be Mr Fix It @
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A11071-2003Jun18.html?nav=hpto
c_h


This article from NYTimes.com has been sent to you by
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Interesting?
Selma

Y Chromosome Depends on Itself to Survive

June 19, 2003
By NICHOLAS WADE

Biologists have made a fundamental discovery about how the
human Y chromosome, a genetic package inherited by men,
protects itself against evolutionary decay.

As part of the work, the scientists have tallied the exact
number of genes on the Y chromosome, finding more than they
had expected. That and other research has led the
researchers to assess the genetic differences between men
and women as being considerably greater than thought.

Although most men are unaware of the peril, the Y
chromosome has been shedding genes furiously over the
course of evolutionary time, and it is now a fraction the
size of its partner, the X chromosome. Sex in humans is
determined by the fact that men have an X and a Y
chromosome in each of their body's cells. Women have a pair
of X's.

The decay of the Y stems from the fact that it is forbidden
to enjoy the principal advantage of sex, which is, of
course, for each member of a pair of chromosomes to swap
matching pieces of DNA with its partner.

The swapping procedure, known to biologists as
recombination, occurs between the chromosomes inherited
from the mother's and the father's side as a first step to
produce the eggs or sperm. Not only does that swapping
create novel combinations of genes, making each individual
different, but it also enables bad genes - those damaged by
mutation or DNA changes - to be replaced by their good
counterparts on the other chromosome.

Nature has barred the Y chromosome from recombining with
the X, except at its very tips, because otherwise the
male-determining gene, carried on the Y chromosome, would
sneak into the X, making everyone male.

The cost of this abstinence, however, is that most of the
Y's genes have been rendered useless by mutation and
physically shed. The X and the Y chromosomes were once as
similar as the 22 other pairs of human chromosomes, and
each carried about 1,000 genes. Now the Y carries fewer
than 100. What prevents it losing even those?

A team of researchers led by Dr. David C. Page, a biologist
at the Whitehead Institute in Cambridge, Mass., has made a
startling discovery. Denied the benefits of recombining
with the X, the Y recombines with itself.

The Y chromosome is made of a single DNA molecule that is
51 million units of DNA in length. Within the chromosome,
Dr. Page and his colleagues report in Nature today, lie
eight vast palindromes, regions that carry identical
sequences of DNA units that run in opposite directions like
the letters in the sentence "Madam, I'm Adam."

By making a hairpin bend in the middle of a palindrome, the
two arms can be brought together, aligning two long
stretches of almost identical DNA sequence. That is the
same step that precedes recombination between the maternal
and paternal members of each ordinary chromosome pair,
which also have almost identical sequences.

In the case of the Y, the alignment of the palindromic
sequences leads to gene conversion. A mutated gene on one
arm of the palindrome can be converted to the undamaged
sequence preserved on the other arm.

This narcissistic process of salvation by palindrome seems
to be what has saved men from extinction so far. It serves
at least to counterbalance the decay caused by the lack of
recombination. But Dr. Page and others say it is too soon
to say which force is now uppermost.

"This is a pretty striking result," said Dr. William Rice,
an expert on the evolution of the sex chromosomes at the
University of California at Santa Barbara.

The mechanism, Dr. Rice said, is novel in human biology. It
will take more study, he added, to see whether it can
reverse Muller's Ratchet, the name that geneticists give to
the grim process of irreversible genetic decay that affects
asexual organisms and nonrecombining genome parts like the
Y chromosome.

"This changes our view of the Y as being an X chromosome
wannabe," said Dr. Evan Eichler, an expert on chromosome
structure at Case Western Reserve.

The X chromosome, too, is denied the benefits of
recombination when paired with the Y. But an X chromosome
spends two-thirds of its time in a woman, where it can
recombine with another X, dodging the Muller's Ratchet that
has so eroded the Y.

The palindromes that make gene conversion possible
sometimes foster another result, large deletions of DNA,
including the genes that they carry. Those losses are a
major cause of male infertility, Dr. Page has found.

Dr. Page's discovery is a fruit of a collaboration with the
genome sequencing center at the Washington University
School of Medicine in St. Louis. Under its previous
director, Dr. Robert H. Waterston, and his successor, Dr.
Richard K. Wilson, the center decoded the precise DNA
sequence in the Y chromosome, a two-year effort.

Dr. Huntington Willard, a genome expert at Duke, said the
sequencing effort was "nearly heroic."

"Most people," Dr. Willard said, "would have thrown their
hands in the air and said this is too much like heavy
lifting."

Although most of the human genome was decoded using DNA
from several people, the Y had to be decoded from one man,
because the natural variation between two men would have
swamped the very small differences in the arms of the Y's
palindromic DNA.

The donor of this Y chromosome is anonymous and designated
by a sample number. But it is known that he was recruited
locally by the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo. So
it can only be said that the person who revealed the secret
of male survival is a Buffalo man known to science as Mr.
RPCI-11.

In the course of a long study of the Y chromosome, Dr.
Page's team has now tallied that it contains 78 genes, some
concerned with male fertility and sperm production and
others with general biological functions. The fertility
genes are almost all sited in the palindromic regions of
DNA. Dr. Page theorizes that the other genes are on their
way out or that the damage from failure to recombine may
drop off after just a handful of genes is left.

The finding of 78 active genes on the Y contradicts an
earlier impression of the chromosome as being a genetic
wasteland apart from its male-determining gene. But if the
Y is not a wasteland, important consequences ensue for the
differences between men and women.

As often noted, the genomes of humans and chimpanzees are
98.5 percent identical, when each of their three billion
DNA units are compared. But what of men and women, who have
different chromosomes?

Until now, biologists have said that makes no difference,
because there are almost no genes on the Y, and in women
one of the two X chromosomes is inactivated, so that both
men and women have one working X chromosome.

But researchers have recently found that several hundred
genes on the X escape inactivation. Taking those genes into
account along with the new tally of Y genes gives this
result: Men and women differ by 1 to 2 percent of their
genomes, Dr. Page said, which is the same as the difference
between a man and a male chimpanzee or between a woman and
a female chimpanzee.

Almost all male-female differences, whether in cognition,
behavior, anatomy or susceptibility to disease, have
usually been attributed to the sex hormones. But given the
genomic differences that are now apparent, that premise has
to be re-examined, in Dr. Page's view.

"We all recite the mantra that we are 99 percent identical
and take political comfort in it," Dr. Page said. "But the
reality is that the genetic difference between males and
females absolutely dwarfs all other differences in the
human genome."

Dr. Rice commented that he would have to think through this
argument, noting that many genes - up to 15 percent in some
animals - are more active in one sex than the other. These
differences in gene activity might dwarf the genomic
differences described by Dr. Page, he said.

Another difference that has emerged between men and women
concerns their ribosomes, the numerous small engines in the
cell that build its working parts from the instructions in
the genes. A general purpose gene on the Y makes a ribosome
component. Its counterpart gene on the X makes a slightly
different protein.

That means that every ribosome in a man's body is slightly
different from those in a woman's. Though the difference is
pervasive, Dr. Page said, it was not known what
significance it may have, if any.

One thing his study had made him sure of was the complexity
with which nature accomplishes its ends.

"It's a great irony that though the Y has been called a sex
chromosome," Dr. Page said, "the bulk of it is asexual.
Nothing is as it appears."

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/19/science/19GENE.html?ex=1057021742&ei=1&en=
2ea980f5f3b6d133


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