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UNSW Embryology

Molecular Development- Sry

© Dr Mark Hill (2007)

Acknowledgements

Male Sex Determination (sry)

Found in 1990 on the Y chromosome, the sry gene encodes a "testis determining factor" a 204aa protein (Mr 23884 Da).

SRY protein (A space fill model)

(original image source)

Sry acts as a transcriptional activator (HMG type-high mobility group) binding to DNA and initiating male sex determination then regulating male development. The protein sequence is shown on this current page and the full genebank entry can also be seen. The sry protein has a HMG box that binds DNA by intercalating in the minor groove. Read about the mapping of the testis determining factor which is SRY.

The actual gene targets of SRY are still being determined but at least one downstream gene Sox9 has been identified. Another gene Dax1 (nuclear hormone-receptor superfamily member) when expressed as a transgene will antagonize Sry and also force dosage-sensitive sex reversal.

Page Links: Introduction | Some Recent Findings | Y chromosome | Human sry Protein Sequence | Developmental Abnormalities | References | Search PubMed | Glossary | WWW Links

Some Recent Findings

Wilhelm D, Palmer S, Koopman P. Sex determination and gonadal development in mammals. Physiol Rev. 2007 Jan;87(1):1-28. Review.

"We review here the molecular and cellular events (differentiation, migration, proliferation, and communication) that distinguish testis and ovary during fetal development, and the changes in gene regulation that underpin these two alternate pathways."

Y chromosome

What else is the Y Chromosome good for?

As well as containing the SRY gene the Y chromosome has been used more recently to estimate the evolutionary age of Humans. Using comparative studies the researchers have found that our ancestors came out of Africa more recently (50,000 years ago) than previously determined by mitochondrial studies.

Human sry Protein Sequence

 

        10         20         30         40         50         60 
         |          |          |          |          |          | 
MQSYASAMLS VFNSDDYSPA VQENIPALRR SSSFLCTESC NSKYQCETGE NSKGNVQDRV
                  
        70         80         90        100        110        120 
         |          |          |          |          |          | 
KRPMNAFIVW SRDQRRKMAL ENPRMRNSEI SKQLGYQWKM LTEAEKWPFF QEAQKLQAMH
                  
       130        140        150        160        170        180 
         |          |          |          |          |          | 
REKYPNYKYR PRRKAKMLPK NCSLLPADPA SVLCSEVQLD NRLYRDDCTK ATHSRMEHQL
                  
       190        200
         |          |
GHLPPINAAS SPQQRDRYSH WTKL
                  
                  

Sequence 60-128 is the HMG box.

In a human XY female, there is mutation giving a F to S conversion at position 109.
(Acc# S53156)

Developmental Abnormalities

Defects in sry lead to 46,XY complete gonadal dysgenesis ( "XY FEMALES" or Swyer Syndrome). This leads to rapid gonadal degeneration leaving only "streak gonads" of fibrous tissue and ovarian stroma. At puberty there is no development of secondary sexual characteristics. These patients have female external genitalia, in contrast 46,XY partial gonadal dysgenesis patients have ambiguous genitalia.

OMIM Entry- GONADAL DYSGENESIS, XY FEMALE TYPE; GDXY
OMIM Entry- GONADAL DYSGENESIS, XY TYPE

References

Search PubMed: term= SRY (Jun06: 1660 Articles 277 Reviews) | testis determining factor | Dax1 |

Sinclair AH, Berta P, Palmer MS, Hawkins JR, Griffiths BL, Smith MJ, Foster JW, Frischauf AM, Lovell-Badge R, Goodfellow PN. A gene from the human sex-determining region encodes a protein with homology to a conserved DNA-binding motif. Nature. 1990 Jul 19;346(6281):240-4.

Gubbay J, Collignon J, Koopman P, Capel B, Economou A, Munsterberg A, Vivian N, Goodfellow P, Lovell-Badge R. A gene mapping to the sex-determining region of the mouse Y chromosome is a member of a novel family of embryonically expressed genes. Nature. 1990 Jul 19;346(6281):245-50.

Glossary of Terms

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External WWW Links

Note the dynamic developmental nature of the Internet means that some links may not always work (search using the link term).

Quick Links

Week 1 Pages:

Introduction | Abnormalities | Gamete formation | Cell division | Fertilization | Zygote | Blastocyst | Male sex determination| X inactivation | References | Text only page | WWW Links |

UNSW Embryology ISBN: 978 0 7334 2436 6

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