Molecular screening of XY SRY-negative sex reversal cases in horses revealed anomalies in amelogenin testing
Author(s) -
M. Martinez,
Mônica Regina Farias Costa,
Cecilia Ratti
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.529
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1943-4936
pISSN - 1040-6387
DOI - 10.1177/1040638720952380
Subject(s) - testis determining factor , sex reversal , amelogenin , genotyping , y chromosome , pseudoautosomal region , genetics , biology , genotype , gene
Male-to-female sex reversal in horses is a developmental disorder in which phenotypic females have a male genetic constitution. Male-to-female sex reversal is the second most common genetic sex abnormality, after X chromosome monosomy. All male-to-female sex reversal cases studied to date have been found to be infertile. Therefore, a screening test is particularly useful in laboratories doing DNA genotyping in horses. Our laboratory has tested > 209,000 horses for parentage using a panel of microsatellite markers and the sex marker gene amelogenin ( AMEL ). Suspect XY sex reversal cases are reported females with a male profile by AMEL testing. After routine genotyping, 49 cases were detected and further tested using the sex-determining region Y ( SRY ) gene, confirming the XY SRY -negative genotype of suspect sex reversal cases. When some inconsistencies arose in the initial result, a molecular panel of X- and Y-linked markers was analyzed for these samples. Of the 49 cases, 33 were confirmed as XY SRY -negative. The remaining 16 cases were identified as false-positives as a result of anomalies of AMEL testing in horses.
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