Of sex and determination: Marking 25 years of Randy, the sex-reversed mouse

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Abstract

On Thursday 9 May 1991, the world awoke to front-page news of a breakthrough in biological research. From Washington to Wollongong, newspapers, radio and TV were abuzz with the story of a transgenic mouse in London called Randy. Why was this mouse so special? The mouse in question was a chromosomal female (XX) made male by the presence of a transgene containing the Y chromosome gene Sry. This sex-reversal provided clear experimental proof that Sry was the elusive mammalian sex-determining gene. Twenty-five years on, we reflect on what this discovery meant for our understanding of how males and females arise and what remains to be understood.

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Koopman, P., Sinclair, A., & Lovell-Badge, R. (2016). Of sex and determination: Marking 25 years of Randy, the sex-reversed mouse. Development (Cambridge), 143(10), 1633–1637. https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.137372

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