4.7 Article

A novel sex determination system in a close relative of the house mouse

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 277, Issue 1684, Pages 1049-1056

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2009.1925

Keywords

African pygmy mouse; Mus minutoides; atypical sex determination system; sex-reversed females; Sry gene; X* chromosome

Funding

  1. CNRS-UM II
  2. Plateforme Cytogenomique
  3. University of Stellenbosch
  4. CNRS-NRF [13293, 15439]
  5. PICS [3196]
  6. GDRI [191]
  7. ISEM [2009-117]

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Therian mammals have an extremely conserved XX/XY sex determination system. A limited number of mammal species have, however, evolved to escape convention and present aberrant sex chromosome complements. In this study, we identified a new case of atypical sex determination in the African pygmy mouse Mus minutoides, a close evolutionary relative of the house mouse. The pygmy mouse is characterized by a very high proportion of XY females (74%, n = 27) from geographically widespread Southern and Eastern African populations. Sequencing of the high mobility group domain of the mammalian sex determining gene Sry, and karyological analyses using fluorescence in situ hybridization and G-banding data, suggest that the sex reversal is most probably not owing to a mutation of Sry, but rather to a chromosomal rearrangement on the X chromosome. In effect, two morphologically different X chromosomes were identified, one of which, designated X*, is invariably associated with sex-reversed females. The asterisk designates the still unknown mutation converting X*Y individuals into females. Although relatively still unexplored, such an atypical sex chromosome system offers a unique opportunity to unravel new genetic interactions involved in the initiation of sex determination in mammals.

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