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Protection Against XY Gonadal Sex Reversal by a Variant Region on Mouse Chromosome 13
Author(s) -
Catherine Livermore,
Michelle Simon,
R. G. Reeves,
Isabelle Stévant,
Serge Nef,
Madeleine Pope,
AnnMarie Mallon,
Sara Wells,
Nick Warr,
Andy Greenfield
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1534/genetics.119.302786
Subject(s) - biology , sex reversal , genetics , congenic , chromosome , y chromosome , phenotype , x chromosome , gene , sex ratio , karyotype , population , demography , sociology
XY C57BL/6J (B6) mice harboring a Mus musculus domesticus -type Y chromosome (Y POS ), known as B6.Y POS mice, commonly undergo gonadal sex reversal and develop as phenotypic females. In a minority of cases, B6.Y POS males are identified and a proportion of these are fertile. This phenotypic variability on a congenic B6 background has puzzled geneticists for decades. Recently, a B6.Y POS colony was shown to carry a non-B6-derived region of chromosome 11 that protected against B6.Y POS sex reversal. Here. we show that a B6.Y POS colony bred and archived at the MRC Harwell Institute lacks the chromosome 11 modifier but instead harbors an ∼37 Mb region containing non-B6-derived segments on chromosome 13. This region, which we call Mod13 , protects against B6.Y POS sex reversal in a proportion of heterozygous animals through its positive and negative effects on gene expression during primary sex determination. We discuss Mod13 's influence on the testis determination process and its possible origin in light of sequence similarities to that region in other mouse genomes. Our data reveal that the B6.Y POS sex reversal phenomenon is genetically complex and the explanation of observed phenotypic variability is likely dependent on the breeding history of any local colony.

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