Biology How does the Y chromosome crossover during meiosis?

  • Thread starter Thread starter musicgold
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
The Y chromosome does not undergo crossover during meiosis, which is significant for paternal lineage as it carries haplotypes that are passed directly from father to son. The X and Y chromosomes pair and crossover only at specific regions called pseudoautosomal regions (PARs), located at their ends, allowing for limited genetic exchange. This crossover is crucial for meiosis to proceed but does not significantly alter the genetic content of the X and Y chromosomes. The presence or absence of the SRY gene determines whether a resultant chromosome is classified as X or Y after crossover occurs in the PAR regions. Overall, the recombination in these regions resembles that of autosomal chromosomes, maintaining distinct inheritance patterns.
musicgold
Messages
303
Reaction score
19
Homework Statement
This is not a homework problem.

Recently I finished reading two books: The Selfish Gene and She Has Her Mothers Laugh, and one of the things I am confused about is this: How does the Y chromosome crossover during meiosis?
Relevant Equations
I understand how the 22 pairs of chromosome in a human male crossover during meiosis, but the 23rd pair is made up of two different types of chromosomes (X and Y). Not only are they different in size but are also in terms of the genes they carry. For example, the sex gene SRY is only on the Y chromosome.
So, I am trying to understand how the 23rd chromosome carried by a sperm is created.

Thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • Like
Likes ColoradoGrrrl, musicgold and BillTre
For homologous chromosomes to pair correctly during meiosis I, the homologous chromosome need to crossover with each other. This obviously presents a problem in males because the X and Y chromosomes need to pair up and crossover, yet they have very different sequences.

The solution to this problem is that the X and Y chromosomes contain regions called pseudoautosomal regions at the ends of the X and Y chromosomes that allow the X and Y chromosomes to cross over and pair only at these regions. Crossing over does not exchange much genetic information between the X and Y chromosomes (since the PAR regions are at the ends), but they do allow pairing so that meiosis can go forward.
 
  • Like
Likes ColoradoGrrrl, musicgold, epenguin and 2 others
Ygggdrasil said:
but they do allow pairing so that meiosis can go forward.
That's what I thought. I read somewhere that fertilization is not possible even if one pair doesn't crossover.

Okay. So, if X and Y do crossover somehow, what makes the resultant chromosome X or Y?
I am assuming the absence of the SRY gene on the amalgamated chromosome makes it a X chromosome. Is that a correct assumption?
 
Crossovers between the X and Y chromosomes can occur only within the PAR regions and the PAR regions are at the ends of the X and Y chromosomes:
350px-Pseudoautosomal_Regions_and_Genes.jpg

(source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudoautosomal_region)

Because crossover cannot occur within the larger bodies of the X and Y chromosomes, most of the important genes on the X chromosome cannot move to the Y chromosome and vice versa. The X and Y chromosomes can recombine genes within the PAR regions (listed in the figure above), but recombination is limited just to those genes. Because the PAR regions on the X and Y chromosomes encode the same genes, recombination of these genes proceeds like recombination would in the other 22 autosomal chromosomes (hence why these regions are called pseudoautosomal regions. Despite being on sex chromosomes, genes on the pseudoautosomal regions can recombine and their inheritance patterns resemble those of normal autosomal genes).
 
  • Like
Likes musicgold
Ygggdrasil said:
... Because the PAR regions on the X and Y chromosomes encode the same genes, recombination of these genes proceeds like recombination would in the other 22 autosomal chromosomes (hence why these regions are called pseudoautosomal regions. ...

Thanks.

Do you have a picture of a recombined 23rd gene?
What makes a recombined gene either X or Y, once parts of the PAR regions are swapped?
 
I don't get how to argue it. i can prove: evolution is the ability to adapt, whether it's progression or regression from some point of view, so if evolution is not constant then animal generations couldn`t stay alive for a big amount of time because when climate is changing this generations die. but they dont. so evolution is constant. but its not an argument, right? how to fing arguments when i only prove it.. analytically, i guess it called that (this is indirectly related to biology, im...

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
3K
Replies
2
Views
3K
Replies
8
Views
3K
Replies
1
Views
4K
Back
Top