Sandbox Reserved 1120

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Ten years later, Clarence Erwin McClung saw that the X chromosome behaved differently during the meiosis and was only present in half the sperm cells of grasshoppers. As the main characteristic that varies in 50/50 proportions among zygotes is the sex, McClung suspected the X chromosome to be implicated in sexual development.
Ten years later, Clarence Erwin McClung saw that the X chromosome behaved differently during the meiosis and was only present in half the sperm cells of grasshoppers. As the main characteristic that varies in 50/50 proportions among zygotes is the sex, McClung suspected the X chromosome to be implicated in sexual development.
In 1905, Nettie Stevens discovered the "Y chromosome" (and so, the female XX and male XY patterns) while she was counting the chromosomes of beetles under the microscope. <ref>Sumner, A. T. Sex Chromosomes and Sex Determination. Chromosomes: Organization and Function, 97-108. [http://www.nature.com/scitable/nated/topicpage/Sex-Chromosomes-and-Sex-Determination-44565]</ref>
In 1905, Nettie Stevens discovered the "Y chromosome" (and so, the female XX and male XY patterns) while she was counting the chromosomes of beetles under the microscope. <ref>Sumner, A. T. Sex Chromosomes and Sex Determination. Chromosomes: Organization and Function, 97-108. [http://www.nature.com/scitable/nated/topicpage/Sex-Chromosomes-and-Sex-Determination-44565]</ref>
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During the next decades, a few theories were in competition. In 1921, Calvin Bridges's works on ''Drosophila melanogaster'' seemed to reveal that male characters acquisition is due to a genic balance between the genes contained in the X chromosome and those contained in the autosomes <ref>PMID: 17769897<ref/>.
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During the next decades, a few theories were in competition. In 1921, Calvin Bridges's works on ''Drosophila melanogaster'' seemed to reveal that male characters acquisition is due to a genic balance between the genes contained in the X chromosome and those contained in the autosomes <ref>PMID: 17769897</ref>.

Revision as of 17:04, 16 January 2016

This Sandbox is Reserved from 15/12/2015, through 15/06/2016 for use in the course "Structural Biology" taught by Bruno Kieffer at the University of Strasbourg, ESBS. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 1120 through Sandbox Reserved 1159.
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SRY protein (AKA TDF protein)

The SRY protein linked to DNA

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References

Genetic Home reference

  1. Sumner, A. T. Sex Chromosomes and Sex Determination. Chromosomes: Organization and Function, 97-108. [1]
  2. Bridges CB. TRIPLOID INTERSEXES IN DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER. Science. 1921 Sep 16;54(1394):252-4. PMID:17769897 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.54.1394.252
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