homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Men's Y chromosome stands its ground - men aren't going extinct!

Good news for men, and especially women: the Y chromosome, which holds the male sex determining genes in most mammals, including humans, is not going extinct, as some claim, as a new research found that the diminishing gene numbers have come to a halt and will remain this way. Sex chromosomes come in pairs, such […]

Tibi Puiu
February 23, 2012 @ 4:12 pm

share Share

Good news for men, and especially women: the Y chromosome, which holds the male sex determining genes in most mammals, including humans, is not going extinct, as some claim, as a new research found that the diminishing gene numbers have come to a halt and will remain this way.

Sex chromosomes come in pairs, such men have X-Y and women have X-X. Around 320 million years ago when the first Y male determining chromosome appeared, both the X and Y chromosomes had roughly the same number of genes, actually sharing 800 genes. In time, the Y chromosome has lost 1,393 of its 1,438 original genes over the course of its existence. With a rate of genetic loss of 4.6 genes per million years, the Y chromosome may potentially lose complete function within the next 10 million years, or so some scientists claim. Currently, the human Y carries a mere 19 of its ancestral genes shared with the X chromosome, out of a once 800 strong, bringing the total number of genes in the human Y to 27.

This would mean that in a few million years, the world would be dominated by women alone, leaving only artificial reproduction as an exclusive option – highly practical, not all that fun. Fear not, for Jennifer Hughes at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts, along with colleagues, have found that the Y chromosome is here to stay.

The researchers sequenced the Y chromosome of the rhesus macaque, a very close relative of humans, from which it diverged paths some 25 million years ago. It was found that the monkey’s Y has 20 genes shared with its X, of which 19 are shared with the human Y. This suggests that the human Y chromosome has lost only one gene since humans and macaques last shared a common ancestor. The research, thus, provides direct evidence that the linear extrapolation model is flawed.

“We finally have empirical data that the Y chromosome has held steady over the last 25 million years,” says Hughes. “Most of the Y chromosome’s gene loss happened almost immediately after it stopped recombining with the X chromosome.” The 19 surviving genes probably have vital biological functions, she says, and so aren’t going anywhere anytime soon.

Here’s to men!

The research was published in the journal Nature. Image credit.

share Share

New Type of EV Battery Could Recharge Cars in 15 Minutes

A breakthrough in battery chemistry could finally end electric vehicle range anxiety

We can still easily get AI to say all sorts of dangerous things

Jailbreaking an AI is still an easy task.

Scientists Solved a Key Mystery Regarding the Evolution of Life on Earth

A new study brings scientists closer to uncovering how life began on Earth.

AI has a hidden water cost − here’s how to calculate yours

Artificial intelligence systems are thirsty, consuming as much as 500 milliliters of water – a single-serving water bottle – for each short conversation a user has with the GPT-3 version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT system. They use roughly the same amount of water to draft a 100-word email message. That figure includes the water used to […]

A Single Mutation Made Horses Rideable and Changed Human History

Ancient DNA reveals how a single mutation reshaped both horses and human history.

Smart Locks Have Become the Modern Frontier of Home Security

What happens when humanity’s oldest symbol of security—the lock—meets the Internet of Things?

A Global Study Shows Women Are Just as Aggressive as Men with Siblings

Girls are just as aggressive as boys — when it comes to their brothers and sisters.

Scientists Create Synthetic Organism That Rewrites Life’s Universal Genetic Code

Researchers engineered E. coli to run on just 57 codons instead of 64

Birds Are Singing Nearly An Hour Longer Every Day Because Of City Lights

Light pollution is making birds sing nearly an hour longer each day

Orange Cats Are Genetically Unlike Any Other Mammal and Now We Know Why

The iconic coats are due to a mutation not seen in other animals.