Medical information you can trust

Home Diseases & Disorders Medications Parenting & Pregnancy Medical Dictionary
 Talk Medical > Medical Dictionary > Y Chromosome

Newsletter

Subscribe to the free monthly health digest.

Relevant health articles just for you.


 

Y Chromosome

 
Y chromosome: The sex chromosome found together with an X chromosome in most normal males. Once thought to be a genetic wasteland, the Y now is known to contain at least 20 genes, some of them unique to the Y including the male-determining gene and male fitness genes that are active only in the testis and are thought responsible for the formation of sperm. Other genes on the Y have counterparts on the X chromosome, are active in many body tissues and play crucial "housekeeping" roles with the cell. A number of specific genes have been Y-linked including:
  • ASMTY (which stands for acetylserotonin methyltransferase),
  • TSPY (testis-specific protein),
  • IL3RAY (interleukin-3 receptor),
  • SRY (sex-determining region),
  • TDF (testis determining factor),
  • ZFY (zinc finger protein), PRKY (protein kinase, Y-linked),
  • AMGL (amelogenin),
  • CSF2RY (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor, alpha subunit on the Y chromosome),
  • ANT3Y (adenine nucleotide translocator-3 on the Y),
  • AZF2 (azoospermia factor 2),
  • BPY2 (basic protein on the Y chromosome),
  • AZF1 (azoospermia factor 1),
  • DAZ (deleted in azoospermia),
  • RBM1 (RNA binding motif protein, Y chromosome, family 1, member A1),
  • RBM2 (RNA binding motif protein 2) and
  • UTY (ubiquitously transcribed TPR gene on Y chromosome).

The Y is a useful chromosome for tracking men because it is transmitted unchanged from father to son. The Y escapes the intergenerational shuffle (recombination) that affects genes on the X chromosome and the remainder of the genome. All men have essentially the same Y chromosome. It is thought that in our small ancestral population some men had no children or only daughters, so that some Y chromosomes disappeared until only one was left. This ubiquitous Y has the same DNA in every man on earth except for the mutation that crops up every millenium and is then inherited by all males descended from that man.

Print this page

 


About Talk Medical · Help · Contact Us · Link to Talk Medical
Talk Medical Copyright © 2008 Talk Medical. All rights reserved. Terms and Conditions. Privacy Policy.