(Redirected from Sex determination)A 'sex-determination system' is a
biological system that determines the development of
sexual characteristics in an
organism. Most sexual organisms have two
sexes. In many cases, sex determination is genetic:
males and
females have different
alleles or even different
genes that specify their sexual
morphology. In
animals, this is often accompanied by
chromosomal differences. In other cases, sex is determined by
environmental variables (such as
temperature) or social variables (the size of an
organism relative to other members of its
population). The details of some sex-determination systems are not yet fully understood.
Chromosomal determination
XX/XY sex chromosomes
The 'XX/XY sex-determination system' is one of the most familiar sex-determination systems and is found in
human beings and most other
mammals. In the XY sex-determination system, females have two of the same kind of sex
chromosome (XX), while males have two distinct sex chromosomes (XY). Some species (including humans) have a gene
SRY on the Y chromosome that determines maleness; others (such as the
fruit fly) use the presence of two X chromosomes to determine femaleness.
XX/X0 sex determination
In this variant of the XY system, females have two copies of the sex chromosome (XX) but males have only one (X0). The ''0'' denotes the absence of a second sex chromosome. This system is observed in a number of
insects, including the grasshoppers and crickets of order
Orthoptera and in cockroaches (order
Blattodea).
The
nematode ''
C. elegans'' is male with one sex chromosome (X0); with a pair of chromosomes (XX) it is a
hermaphrodite.
ZW sex chromosomes
The 'ZW sex-determination system' is found in
birds and some
insects and other
organisms. The ZW sex-determination system is reversed compared to the XY system: females have two different kinds of
chromosomes (ZW), and males have two of the same kind of
chromosomes (ZZ).
It is unknown whether the presence of the W chromosome induces female features or the duplication of the Z chromosome induces male ones; unlike mammals, no birds with a double W chromosome (ZWW) or a single Z (Z0) have been discovered. It is possible that either condition causes
embryonic death, and both chromosomes are responsible for gender selection; or it may just be that ZWW is just as rare in birds as
Turner's syndrome (XO) or
Kleinfelter's syndrome (XXY) is in humans, and without having any reason to check individual animals for this, it has never been found.
In
Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies), examples of Z0, ZZW and ZZWW females can be found. This suggests that the W chromosome is essential in female determination in some species (ZZW), but not in others (Z0). In ''
Bombyx mori'' (the commercial silkworm), the W chromosome carries the female-determining genes.
Chromosomes in the ZW region in birds are
autosomal in mammals, and vice-versa; therefore, it is theorized that the ZW and XY couples come from different chromosomes of the
common ancestor. A paper published in
2004 (Frank Grützner ''et al'', ''
Nature''; ) suggests that the two systems may be related. According to the paper,
platypuses have a ten-
chromosome–based system, where the chromosomes form a multivalent chain in male
meiosis, segregating into XXXXX-sperm and YYYYY-sperm, with XY-equivalent chromosomes at one end of this chain and the ZW-equivalent chromosomes at the other end.
Haplodiploidy
Main articles: Ploidy,
Haplodiploid sex-determination system
Haplodiploidy is found in
insects belonging to
Hymenoptera, such as
ants and
bees. Unfertilized eggs develop into
haploid individuals, which are the males.
Diploid individuals are generally female but may be sterile males. Thus, if a queen
bee mates with one drone, her daughters share ¾ of their genes with each other, not ½ as in the XY and ZW systems. This is believed to be significant for the development of
eusociality, as it increases the significance of
kin selection.
Non-genetic sex-determination systems
Main articles: Temperature-dependent sex determination
Many other exotic sex-determination systems exist. In some species of reptiles, including
alligators, some
turtles, and the
tuatara, sex is determined by the temperature at which the egg is incubated. Other species, such as some
snails, practice sex change: adults start out male, then become female. In tropical
clown fish, the dominant individual in a group becomes female while the other ones are male.
Some species have no sex-determination system.
Earthworms and some snails are
hermaphrodites; a few species of lizard, fish, and insect are all female and reproduce by
parthenogenesis.
In some
arthropods, sex is determined by infection.
Bacteria of the genus ''
Wolbachia'' alter their sexuality; some species consist entirely of ZZ individuals, with sex determined by the presence of ''Wolbachia''.
Other unusual systems [this section still being researched]:
★
Swordtail fish?
★ The
Chironomus midge species
★
Platypus
See also
★
testis-determining factor
★
Barr body
★
Protandry
★
Protogyny
★ For humans:
★
★
Sex organ, or primary sexual characteristic
★
★
Secondary sex characteristic
★
★
Shettles Method
★
★
XYY syndrome
External links
★
The Unusual Sex Determination System of Chironomus
★
The Enigma of Sex Determination in Reptiles
★
''Nature'' news article about duck-billed platypus sex determination
★
Hens, cocks, and avian sex determination
★
The Y chromosome as a battleground for sexual selection
References
★ (2004)
Evolution of Sex Chromosomes: The Case of the White Campion.
★ (2006)
Multiple independent origins of sex chromosomes in amniotes.