Sex Determination In the 1940’s, the French embryologist Alfred
Jost observed that when the undifferentiated
gonads were removed from a male rabbit fetus
before male development had begun, it
developed as a female. In 1959, chromosomal
analysis of two disorders in man, Turner syndrome
and Klinefelter syndrome, yielded the
first evidence that genetic factors on the Y chromosomes
of mammals are important in determining
male sex. A specific gene on the mammalian
Y chromosome (SRY, sex-related Y) induces
male sex development during embryogenesis
(sex determination).
- Determination of male phenotype by the
Y chromosome
Individuals with Turner syndrome have only one X
chromosome (no Y chromosome) and a female phenotype,
although incompletely developed and usually accompanied
bymalformations. Individuals with Klinefelter syndrome
have two X chromosomes, a Y chromosome, and a male
phenotype, although also incompletely developed
(p. 402).
- Sex-determining region SRY on the Y chromosome
The relevant region in man lies in the distal short
arm of the Y chromosome at Yp11.32. The short arm
and the proximal half of the long arm of the Y chromosome
have been divided into seven intervals (2). The
most distal region of the short arm is the pseudoautosomal
region 1 (PAR 1). This region is homologous to the
distal segment of the short arm of the X chromosome.
Homologous pairing occurs here with crossingover
during meiosis. The physical map of the pseudoautosomal
region and the proximal half of interval 1 (1A1–1B)
span somewhat more than 2500 kb in man (3). Intervals
2–7 contain no genes for male sex determination.
The crucial portion of the Y chromosome for male
sex determination in man is about 35 kb (in the
mouse about 14 kb) of a region designated Sry (sex-related
Y chromosomal region) in the interval 1A1 proximal
to the pseudoautosomal region (1). (After U.Wolf
et al., 1992).
- Male development of an XX mouse transgenic
for the Sry gene
Clinical observations and experimental evidence
indicate that the presence of SRY induces male development,
irrespective of the presence of the remainder of
the Y chromosome. A chromosomally female transgenic
mouse (XX) shows normal male development after the
14 kb DNA fragment carrying the Sry region of a
mouse Y chromosome is implanted into its blastocyst.
(Figure from Koopman et al., 1991).
- Sry expression during embryonic gonadal
development of the mouse
During embryonic development of an XY mouse, Sry
is expressed only between days 10.5 and 12.5. The
subsequent events leading to male development are
initiated during this short time of expression.
(Figure from Koopman and Gubbay, 1991).
- References
Cameron, F., Sinclair A.H.:Mutations in SRY and
SOX9: testis-determining genes. Hum.
Mutat. 9:388–395, 1997.
Goodfellow, P.N., Camerino, G.: DAX-1, an “antitestis”
gene. Cell Mol. Life Sci. 55:857–863,
1999.
Hargraeve, T.B.: Understanding the Y chromosome.
Lancet 354:1746–1747, 1999.
Koopman, P., Gubbay J.: The biology of Sry. Seminars
Develop. Biol. 2:259–264, 1991.
Koopman, P., et al.: Male development of chromosomally
female mice transgenic for Sry.
Nature 351:117–121, 1991.
McElreavey, K., Fellous, M.: Sex determination
and the Y chromosome. Am. J. Med. Genet.
(Semin. Med. Genet.) 89:176–185, 1999.
Roberts, L.M., Shen, J., Ingraham, H.A.: New solutions
to an ancient riddle: Defining the
differences between Adam and Eve. Am. J.
Hum. Genet. 65:933–942, 1999.
Swain, A., Lovell-Badge, R.: Mammalian sex determination:
amolecular drama. Genes Dev.
13:755–767, 1999.
Wolf,U., Schempp,W., Scherer,G.: Molecular biology
of the human Y chromosome. Rev.
Physiol. Biochem. Pharmacol. 121:148–213,
1992.
Sex Differentiation
Sex differentiation (development of a given sex) consists
of many genetically regulated, hierarchical developmental
steps. In mammals, the development of male structures
requires induction by appropriate genes.
- Indifferent anlagen of sex differentiation
The gonads (1), the efferent ducts (mesonephric
and paramesonephric) (2), and the external genitalia
(3) all develop from an indifferent stage. At about
the end of the sixth week of pregnancy in humans,
after the primordial germ cells of the embryo have
migrated into the initially undifferentiated gonads,
an inner portion (medulla) and an outer portion
(cortex) of the gonads can be distinguished. When
a normal Y chromosome is present, early embryonic
testes develop at about the 10th week of pregnancy
under the influence of a testis-determining factor
(TDF). If a normal Y or TDF (SRY) is not present,
ovaries develop. The wolffian ducts, the precursors
of the male efferent ducts (vas deferens, seminal
vesicles, and prostate), develop under the influence
of testosterone, a male steroid hormone formed in
the fetal testis. At the same time, the müllerian
ducts—precursors of the fallopian tubes, the uterus,
and the upper vagina—are suppressed by a hormone,
the Müllerian Inhibition Factor (MIF; also known
as anti-müllerian hormone, AMH). When testosterone
is absent or ineffective, the wolffian ducts degenerate.
The müllerian ducts develop under the influence
of estradiol, a hormone produced by the fetal ovaries.
The external genitalia (3) in humans do not develop
until relatively late, starting in the 15th to 16thweek.
Full development of male external genitalia depends
on a derivative of male-inducing testosterone, 5-dihydrotestosterone,
a metabolite of testosterone produced by the enzymatic
action of 5!-reductase.
- Sequence of events in sex differentiation
Sex differentiation proceeds in a cascadelike manner,
with a series of temporally regulated successive
steps at different levels of differentiation. After
the primordial germ cells migrate into the undifferentiated
gonads, early embryonic testes develop under the
influence of testis-determining factor (TDF) if
a Y chromosome is present. TDF is identical with
the Yspecific sequences of the SRY region (see p.
386). During normal male differentiation, the further
development of the müllerian ducts is suppressed
by the müllerian inhibitor factor. Testosterone
can exert its effect only in the presence of an
appropriate intracellular receptor (androgen receptor
TFM, see p. 390). When a Y chromosome is not present
or when the SRY region is missing or altered by
mutation, testes are not formed. In this case the
wolffian ducts cease to develop. In the absence
of testes, ovaries develop from the undifferentiated
gonads; the wolffian ducts degenerate; and the müllerian
ducts differentiate into uterine tubes, uterus,
and the upper vagina. Testosterone also has an effect
on the central nervous system (“brain imprinting”).
It is assumed that this is required for the psychosexual
orientation apparent later in life. When testosterone
is absent or ineffective due to a receptor defect,
gender orientation is female. In the majority of
genetically determined disorders of sexual differentiation,
gonadal and genital sex do not correspond (pseudohermaphroditism).
In true hermaphroditism, where the gonads consist
of both testicular and ovarian tissues, male and
female structures exist side by side.
- References
Arango, N.A., Lovell-Badge, R., Behringer, R.R.:
Targeted mutagenesis of the endogenous
mouse Mis gene promoter: in vivo definition
of genetic pathways of vertebrate
sexual development. Cell 99:409–419,
1999.
Ferguson-Smith, M.A., Goodfellow, P.N.: SRY
and primary sex-reversal syndromes, pp.
739–749, In: C.R. Scriver, et al., eds., The
Metabolic and Molecular Bases of Inherited
Disease. 7th ed. McGraw-Hill, New York,
1995.
Wilson, J.D., Griffin, J.E.: Disorders of sexual
differentiation, pp. 2119–2131. In: A.S.
Fauci, et al., eds., Harrison’s Principles
and
Practice of Internal Medicine. 14th ed..
McGraw-Hill, New York, 1998.
Disorders of Sexual Development
Normal sexual development is the result of numerous
genes. Mutation or chromosomal rearrangements of any
of these genes cause partial or total failure of sex
differentiation. The classification of genetically determined
disorders of sexual development takes the different
developmental processes into account. Pinpointing the
basic defect is a prerequisite for diagnosis and treatment.
- Male-determining region SRY on the Y chromosome
Normally, the male-determining Y-specific DNA sequences
(SRY) remain on the Y chromosome during the homologous
pairing and crossingover during meiosis. However,
since the maledetermining region SRY is located
very close to the pseudoautosomal region (PAR),
crossingover in the PAR border region may result
in a transfer of the SRY region to the X chromosome.
This results in a male individual with an XX karyotype
(XX male). Conversely, if the SRY region is missing
from a Y chromosome, a female phenotype with XY
chromosomes (XY female) results.
- Point mutations in the SRY gene
The human SRY gene has a single exon and encodes
a 204-amino-acid protein from a 1.1 kb transcript.
The middle section of the SRY protein consists of
79 highly conserved amino acids with DNA-bending
and DNA-binding capability, the HMG box (high mobility
group protein). Complete or partial gonadal dysgenesis
results from point mutations and deletions in the
SRY gene, in particular the HMG box. (Figure adapted
fromWolf et al., 1992; for an update of mutations
see McElreavey and Fellous, 1999). Sex reversal
also results from mutations in the SOX9 gene on
chromosome 17 at q24 in campomelic dysplasia. (Foster
et al., 1994; Wagner et al., 1994).
- Androgen receptor
The fetal testis produces testosterone, the hormone
that induces male sexual differentiation. Testosterone
is taken up by cells of the target tissues (wolffian
ducts and urogenital sinus) (1). In the urogenital
sinus, testosterone is converted into dihydrotestosterone
(DHT) by the enzyme 5!-reductase. Both testosterone
and dihydrotestosterone bind to an intracellular
receptor (androgen receptor). The activated hormone–
receptor complex (TR* or DR*) acts as a transcription
factor for genes that regulate the differentiation
of thewolffian ducts and the urogenital sinus. Thus,
normal male fetal development is dependent on normal
biosynthesis of testosterone and normal receptors.
Androgen receptor mutations lead to disorders of
sexual development (2) with X-chromosomal inherited
complete or incomplete androgen resistance (testicular
feminization, TFM).
- Classification of genetically determined
disorders of sexual development
1. Defects of sex determination due to mutation
or structural aberration of the SRY region
on the Y chromosome (e.g., XY gonadal dysgenesis,
XX males, and others)
2. Defects of androgen biosynthesis (e.g., adrenogenital
syndrome due to 21-hydroxylase
deficiency, see p. 392)
3. Defects of androgen receptors (testicular feminization)
4. Defects of the müllerian inhibition substance
(so-called hernia uteri syndrome)
5. XO/XY gonadal dysgenesis
- References
Foster, J.W., et al.: Campomelic dysplasia and
autosomal sex reversal caused bymutations
in an SRY-related gene. Nature 372: 525–
530, 1994.
Goodfellow, P.N., Camerino, G.: DAX-1, an “antitestis”
gene. Cell Mol. Life Sci. 55:857–863,
1999.
Gottlieb, B., et al.: Androgen insensitivity. Am.
J.
Med. Genet. (Semin. Med. Genet.) 89:210–
217, 1999.
McElreavey, K., Fellous, M.: Sex determination
and the Y chromosome. Am. J. Med. Genet.
89:176–185, 1999.
Wagner, T., et al.: Autosomal sex reversal and
campomelic dysplasia are caused by mutations
in and around the SRY-related
SOX9. Cell 79:1111–1120, 1994.
Wilson, J.D., Griffin, J.E.: Disorders of sexual
differentiation, pp. 2119–2131. In: A.S.
Fauci, et al., eds., Harrison’s Principles
and
Practice of Internal Medicine. 14th ed.,
McGraw-Hill, New York, 1998.
Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
This disorder, also called adrenogenital syndrome (AGS,
McKusick 201910), is caused by a genetically determined
deficiency of cortisol, a steroid hormone produced in
the fetal adrenal cortex. A compensatory increase in
adrenocortical hormone (ACTH) excretion leads to secondary
enlargement (hyperplasia) of the adrenal cortex (congenital
adrenal hyperplasia), increased production of prenatal
steroids and their metabolites with androgenic effects,
and incomplete female sex differentiation.
- Clinical phenotype and genetics
Girls are born with ambiguous or virilized genitalia
(1). The adrenal cortex is enlarged (2). Increased
production of androgenic metabolites causes masculinization.
The cortisol deficiency (3) leads to life-threatening
crises due to loss of sodium chloride (salt-wasting)
that require prompt treatment. AGS is an autosomal
recessive heritable disorder (4). Untreated girls
develop amale physical appearance (5). In boys,
the early signs are limited to salt-wasting. Initially,
skeletalmaturation is accelerated and the children
are tall for their age; however, they stop growing
prematurely and eventually are too short. Besides
the classic form of the disorder with a frequency
of 1:5000, there are other forms with less pronounced
masculinization due to different mutations.
- Biochemical defect
The enzymatic conversion of progesterone to deoxycortisol
(DOC) by hydroxylation at position 21 (steroid 21-hydroxylase)
is decreased. As a result, the concentration of
17-hydroxyprogesterone is increased.
- Gene locus and gene structure
21-Hydroxylase is encoded by the CYP21 gene (formerly
called CYP21B and 21-OHB), a member of the cytochrome
P450 oxidase gene family. This gene is located within
the class III genes of the major histocompatibility
complex on the short arm of human chromosome 6.
It is part of a tandem paired arrangement of three
other genes: active C4A and C4B genes and a 96–98%
homologous inactive CYP21P gene, a pseudogene due
to intragenic deletions resulting in stop codons
(formerly called CYP21A or 21-OHA). These genes
originated from a duplication event in evolution.
The CYP21 (21-OHB) gene consists of 10 exons spanning
almost 6 kb of genomic DNA (the actual distance
of 30 kb to the C4 A and C4 B genes is not shown
to scale).
- Molecular genetic analysis
Point mutations, deletions, and duplications occur
in the CYP21 gene. The deletions and duplications
result from misalignment of the homologous chromatids
during meiosis and unequal crossing-over. Deletions
occur in about 20–25% of patientswith classic 21-hydroxylase
deficiency. Duplications have no clinical consequences.
Deletions and duplications can be easily detected
by Southern blot analysis. The most frequent type
of deletion is loss of a 30 kb region including
the 3' part of the CYP21P pseudogene, the entire
C4B gene, and the 5' part of the CYP21 gene. The
resulting fusion gene of CYP21P and CYP21 carries
a TaqI restriction site in the 5' region of CYP21P
that is not present in the CYP21 gene. Therefore,
the fusion gene has a characteristic 3.2 kb TaqI
fragment. This distinguishes the rearrangement from
the normal CYP21 gene, which has a characteristic
3.7 kb fragment. In the example shown, the CYP21
gene (21-OHB) is represented by a 3.7 kb DNA fragment,
the pseudogene CYP21P (21-OHA) by a 3.2 kb fragment
after TaqI digestion (1). Thus, the normal pattern
is a 3.7 kb and a 3.2 kb fragment (2). Homozygous
deletion of either of the genes may be apparent
by lack of either of the two fragments (3, 4). A
heterozygous deletion shows reduced intensity (5)
and a duplication shows increased intensity (6).
(Figure adapted from New et al., 1989). Another
common mechanism for the origin of mutation in the
CYP21 gene is gene conversion. This involves nonreciprocal
exchange between the closely linked CYP21 and CYP21P
genes, which results in transfer of mutations from
the pseudogene CYP21P to CYP21.
- References
New, M.I., et al.: The adrenal hyperplasias, pp.
1881–1917. In: C.R. Scriver, et al., eds., The
Metabolic Basis of Inherited Disease. 6th ed.
McGraw-Hill, New York, 1989.
Wilson, R.C., New, M.I.: Congenital adrenal hyperplasia,
pp. 481–493. In: J.L. Jameson, ed.,
Principles of Molecular Medicine. Humana
Press, Totowa, New Jersey, 1998.
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