TY - JOUR
T1 - Germ cell development in the XXY mouse
T2 - Evidence that X chromosome reactivation is independent of sexual differentiation
AU - Mroz, K.
AU - Carrel, L.
AU - Hunt, P. A.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank George Enders for supplying the GCNA1 antibody, Eva Eicher for providing breeding stock of T16 mice, Terry Ashley for the chromosome 8-specific probe, Jennifer Newland and Robert Plenge for PCR primers, and Terry Hassold for comments on the manuscript. This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Research Grant R01 HD31866 to P.A.H. and a national Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship to K.M.
PY - 1999/3/1
Y1 - 1999/3/1
N2 - Prior to entry into meiosis, XX germ cells in the fetal ovary undergo X chromosome reactivation. The signal for reactivation is thought to emanate from the genital ridge, but it is unclear whether it is specific to the developing ovary. To determine whether the signals are present in the developing testis as well as the ovary, we examined the expression of X- linked genes in germ cells from XXY male mice. To facilitate this analysis, we generated XXY and XX fetuses carrying X chromosomes that were differentially marked and subject to nonrandom inactivation. This pattern of nonrandom inactivation was maintained in somatic cells but, in XX as well as XXY fetuses, both parental alleles were expressed in germ cell-enriched cell populations. Because testis differentiation is temporally and morphologically normal in the XXY testis and because all germ cells embark upon a male pathway of development, these results provide compelling evidence that X chromosome reactivation in fetal germ cells is independent of the somatic events of sexual differentiation. Proper X chromosome dosage is essential for the normal fertility of male mammals, and abnormalities in germ cell development are apparent in the XXY testis within several days of X reactivation. Studies of exceptional germ cells that survive in the postnatal XXY testis demonstrated that surviving germ cells are exclusively XY and result from rare nondisjunctional events that give rise to clones of XY cells.
AB - Prior to entry into meiosis, XX germ cells in the fetal ovary undergo X chromosome reactivation. The signal for reactivation is thought to emanate from the genital ridge, but it is unclear whether it is specific to the developing ovary. To determine whether the signals are present in the developing testis as well as the ovary, we examined the expression of X- linked genes in germ cells from XXY male mice. To facilitate this analysis, we generated XXY and XX fetuses carrying X chromosomes that were differentially marked and subject to nonrandom inactivation. This pattern of nonrandom inactivation was maintained in somatic cells but, in XX as well as XXY fetuses, both parental alleles were expressed in germ cell-enriched cell populations. Because testis differentiation is temporally and morphologically normal in the XXY testis and because all germ cells embark upon a male pathway of development, these results provide compelling evidence that X chromosome reactivation in fetal germ cells is independent of the somatic events of sexual differentiation. Proper X chromosome dosage is essential for the normal fertility of male mammals, and abnormalities in germ cell development are apparent in the XXY testis within several days of X reactivation. Studies of exceptional germ cells that survive in the postnatal XXY testis demonstrated that surviving germ cells are exclusively XY and result from rare nondisjunctional events that give rise to clones of XY cells.
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U2 - 10.1006/dbio.1998.9160
DO - 10.1006/dbio.1998.9160
M3 - Article
C2 - 10049577
AN - SCOPUS:0033104435
SN - 0012-1606
VL - 207
SP - 229
EP - 238
JO - Developmental biology
JF - Developmental biology
IS - 1
ER -