Placenta
Volume 31, Supplement , Pages S27-S32, March 2010

Review: Sex Chromosome Evolution and the Expression of Sex-Specific Genes in the Placenta

  • J.A.M. Graves

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationTel.: +61 2 6125 2492; fax: +61 2 6125 8525.

Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia

Accepted 23 December 2009. published online 17 February 2010.

Abstract 

Sex chromosomes have a disproportionate influence on health and disease. Both the X and Y are atypical in gene content and activity, as a result of their unique evolutionary trajectory. The X and Y chromosomes originated in a pair of autosomes, and differentiated as the Y chromosome degenerated progressively. The Y contains few active genes and is composed largely of repetitive DNA sequences. Most Y genes have copies on the X from which they evolved; this includes even the sex-determining gene SRY as well as several genes required for spermatogenesis. The X contains a disproportionate number of genes that affect reproduction and brain function (or both). It is also subject to inactivation in females, so that females are mosaics composed of patches of tissue that express only the genes on either the maternally or the paternally derived X chromosome. Several widely expressed genes on the Y chromosome code for male-specific proteins that provoke an immune reaction in females; this HY antigen has a measurable effect on maternal-fetal incompatibility. Imprinted paternal X inactivation in rodent extraembryonic tissues would be expected to mitigate the effect of foreign paternal antigens; however, paternal inactivation seems not to occur in the human placenta.

Keywords: Sex chromosomes, X chromosome, Y chromosome, Sexual antagonism, Brains-and-balls genes

 

PII: S0143-4004(10)00007-X

doi:10.1016/j.placenta.2009.12.029

Placenta
Volume 31, Supplement , Pages S27-S32, March 2010