Gene SRY et anomalies de la determination genetique du sexe chez l'homme

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Abstract

Normal sexual development in man is the consequence of a complex process. This review focuses on the translation of genedal sex (XX or XY karyotype) into gonadal sex (testis or ovary). During the last three years attempts to identify and clone the testis determining factor (TDF) have exploited detailed maps of the Y chromosome established by geneticists over the last decade. A candidate gene, named SRY (sex determining region, Y) located at the tip of the short arm of the Y chromosome, shows many characteristics in common with TDF in that it is the sole element of the Y chromosome required for male development. The discovery of TDF led us to analyse sex-reversed individuals, i.e. XX males and XY females, with the aim of constructing a model for the processes regulating the development of an organ as complex as the testis. This SRY gene is now the subject of intense molecular biological effort by various groups, effort which we hope will elucidate the mechanism(s) of sex determination. © 1992 Société d'Andrologie de Langue Française.

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APA

Poulat, F., Goze, C., Boizet, B., & Berta, P. (1992). Gene SRY et anomalies de la determination genetique du sexe chez l’homme. Andrologie, 2(2), 50–52. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03034216

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