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By this point in the biology playlist, you're probably
wondering a very natural question, how is gender
determined in an organism?
And it's not an obvious answer, because throughout the
animal kingdom, it's actually determined in different ways.
In some creatures, especially some types of reptiles, it's
environmental.
Not all reptiles, but certain cases of it.
It could be maybe the temperature in which the
embryo develops will dictate whether it turns into a male
or female or other environmental factors.
And in other types of animals, especially mammals, of which
we are one example, it's a genetic basis.
And so your next question is, hey, Sal, so-- let me write
this down, in mammals it's genetic-- so, OK, maybe
they're different alleles, a male or a female allele.
But then you're like, hey, but there's so many different
characteristics that differentiate
a man from a woman.
Maybe it would have to be a whole set of genes that have
to work together.
And to some degree, your second answer
would be more correct.
It's even more than just a set of genes.
It's actually whole chromosomes determine it.
So let me draw a nucleus.
That's going to be my nucleus.
And this is going to be the nucleus for a man.
So 22 of the pairs of chromosomes are just regular
non-sex-determining chromosomes.
So I could just do, that's one of the homologous, 2, 4, 6, 8,
10, 12, 14.
I can just keep going.
And eventually you have 22 pairs.
So these 22 pairs right there, they're called autosomal.
And those are just our standard pairs of chromosomes
that code for different things.
Each of these right here is a homologous pair, homologous,
which we learned before you get one from
each of your parents.
They don't necessarily code for the same thing, for the
same versions of the genes, but they code
for the same genes.
If eye color is on this gene, it's also on that gene, on the
other gene of the homologous pair.
Although you might have different versions of eye
color on either one and that determines what you display.
But these are just kind of the standard genes that have
nothing to do with our gender.
And then you have these two other special chromosomes.
I'll do this one.
It'll be a long brown one, and then I'll do a short blue one.
And the first thing you'll notice is that they don't look
homologous.
How could they code for the same thing when the blue one
is short and the brown one's long?
And that's true.
They aren't homologous.
And these we'll call our sex-determining chromosomes.
And the long one right here, it's been the convention to
call that the x chromosome.
Let me scroll down a little bit.
And the blue one right there, we refer to that as the y
chromosome.
And to figure out whether something is a male or a
female, it's a pretty simple system.
If you've got a y chromosome, you are a male.
So let me write that down.
So this nucleus that I drew just here-- obviously you
could have the whole broader cell all around here-- this is
the nucleus for a man.
So if you have an x chromosome-- and we'll talk
about in a second why you can only get that from your mom--
an x chromosome from your mom and a y chromosome from your
dad, you will be a male.
If you get an x chromosome from your mom and an x
chromosome from your dad, you're going to be a female.
And so we could actually even draw a Punnett square.
This is almost a trivially easy Punnett square, but it
kind of shows what all of the different possibilities are.
So let's say this is your mom's genotype for her
sex-determining chromosome.
She's got two x's.
That's what makes her your mom and not your dad.
And then your dad has an x and a y-- I should do it in
capital-- and has a Y chromosome.
And we can do a Punnett square.
What are all the different combinations of offspring?
Well, your mom could give this X chromosome, in conjunction
with this X chromosome from your dad.
This would produce a female.
Your mom could give this other X chromosome with that X
chromosome.
That would be a female as well.
Well, your mom's always going to be donating an X
chromosome.
And then your dad is going to donate either the X or the Y.
So in this case, it'll be the Y chromosome.
So these would be female, and those would be male.
And it works out nicely that half are female
and half are male.
But a very interesting and somewhat ironic fact might pop
out at you when you see this.
Who determines whether their offspring are male or female?
Is it the mom or the dad?
Well, the mom always donates an X chromosome, so in no way
does what the haploid genetic makeup of the mom's eggs, of
the gamete from the female, in no way does that determine the
gender of the offspring.
It's all determined by whether-- let me just draw a
bunch of-- dad's got a lot of ***, and they're all racing
towards the egg.
And some of them have an X chromosome in them and some of
them have a Y chromosome in them.
And obviously they have others.
And obviously if this guy up here wins the race.
Or maybe I should say this girl.
If she wins the race, then the fertilized egg will develop
into a female.
If this *** wins the race, then the fertilized egg will
develop into a male.
And the reason why I said it's ironic is throughout history,
and probably the most famous example of this
is Henry the VIII.
I mean it's not just the case with kings.
It's probably true, because most of our civilization is
male dominated, that you've had these men who are obsessed
with producing a male heir to kind of take
over the family name.
And, in the case of Henry the VIII, take over a country.
And they become very disappointed and they tend to
blame their wives when the wives keep producing females,
but it's all their fault.
Henry the VIII, I mean the most famous case
was with Ann Boleyn.
I'm not an expert here, but the general notion is that he
became upset with her that she wasn't producing a male heir.
And then he found a reason to get her essentially
decapitated, even though it was all his fault.
He was maybe producing a lot more *** that looked like
that than was looking like this.
He eventually does produce a male heir so he was-- and if
we assume that it was his child-- then obviously he was
producing some of these, but for the most part, it was all
Henry the VIII's fault.
So that's why I say there's a little bit of irony here.
Is that the people doing the blame are the people to blame
for the lack of a male heir.
Now one question that might immediately pop up in your
head is, Sal, is everything on these chromosomes related to
just our sex-determining traits or are there other
stuff on them?
So let me draw some chromosomes.
So let's say that's an X chromosome and this is a Y
chromosome.
Now the X chromosome, it does code for a lot more things,
although it is kind of famously gene poor.
It codes for on the order of 1,500 genes.
And the Y chromosome, it's the most gene poor of all the
chromosomes.
It only codes for on the order of 78 genes.
I just looked this up, but who knows if it's exactly 78.
But what it tells you is it does very little other than
determining what the gender is.
And the way it determines that, it does have one gene on
it called the SRY gene.
You don't have to know that.
SRY, that plays a role in the development of *** or the
male *** organ.
So if you have this around, this gene right here can start
coding for things that will eventually lead to the
development of the testicles.
And if you don't have that around, that won't happen, so
you'll end up with a female.
And I'm making gross oversimplifications here.
But everything I've dealt with so far, OK, this clearly plays
a role in determining sex.
But you do have other traits on these genes.
And the famous cases all deal with specific disorders.
So, for example, color blindness.
The genes, or the mutations I should say.
So the mutations that cause color blindness.
Red-green color blindness, which I did in green, which is
maybe a little bit inappropriate.
Color blindness and also hemophilia.
This is an inability of your blood to clot.
Actually, there's several types of hemophilia.
But hemophilia is an inability for your
blood to clot properly.
And both of these are mutations on the X chromosome.
And they're recessive mutations.
So what does that mean?
It means both of your X chromosomes have to have--
let's take the case for hemophilia-- both of your X
chromosomes have to have the hemophilia mutation in order
for you to show the phenotype of having hemophilia.
So, for example, if there's a woman, and let's say this is
her genotype.
She has one regular X chromosome and then she has
one X chromosome that has the-- I'll put a little
superscript there for hemophilia-- she has the
hemophilia mutation.
She's just going to be a carrier.
Her phenotype right here is going to be no hemophilia.
She'll have no problem clotting her blood.
The only way that a woman could be a hemophiliac is if
she gets two versions of this, because this
is a recessive mutation.
Now this individual will have hemophilia.
Now men, they only have one X chromosome.
So for a man to exhibit hemophilia, to have this
phenotype, he just needs it only on the one X
chromosome he has.
And then the other one's a Y chromosome.
So this man will have hemophilia.
So a natural question should be arising is, hey, you know
this guy-- let's just say that this is a relatively
infrequent mutation that arises on an X chromosome--
the question is who's more likely to have hemophilia?
A male or a female?
All else equal, who's more likely to have it?
Well if this is a relatively infrequent allele, a female,
in order to display it, has to get two versions of it.
So let's say that the frequency of it-- and I looked
it up before this video-- roughly they say between 1 in
5,000 to 10,000 men exhibit hemophilia.
So let's say that the allele frequency of this is 1 in
7,000, the frequency of Xh, the hemophilia version of the
X chromosome.
And that's why 1 in 7,000 men display it, because it's
completely determined whether-- there's a 1 in 7,000
chance that this X chromosome they get is
the hemophilia version.
Who cares what the Y chromosome they get is, cause
that essentially doesn't code at all for the blood clotting
factors and all of the things that drive hemophilia.
Now, for a woman to get
hemophilia, what has to happen?
She has to have two X chromosomes with the mutation.
Well the probability of each of them having the mutation is
1 in 7,000.
So the probability of her having hemophilia is 1 in
7,000 times 1 in 7,000, or that's 1 in what, 49 million.
So as you can imagine, the incidence of hemophilia in
women is much lower than the incidence of
hemophilia in men.
And in general for any sex-linked trait, if it's
recessive, if it's a recessive sex-linked trait, which means
men, if they have it, they're going to show it, because they
don't have another X chromosome to dominate it.
Or for women to show it, she has to have
both versions of it.
The incidence in men is going to be, so let's say that m is
the incidence in men.
I'm spelling badly.
Then the incidence in women will be what?
You could view this as the allele frequency of that
mutation on the X chromosome.
So women have to get two versions of it.
So the woman's frequency is m squared.
And you might say, hey, that looks like a bigger number.
I'm squaring it.
But you have to remember that these numbers, the frequency
is less than 1, so in the case of hemophilia,
that was 1 in 7,000.
So if you square 1 in 7,000, you get 1 in 49 million.
Anyway, hopefully you found that interesting and now you
know how we all become men and women.
And even better you know whom to blame when some of these, I
guess, male-focused parents are having trouble
getting their son.