It has been suggested that there are special evolutionary forces that act on sex chromosomes. Hemizygosity of the X chromosome in male mammals has led to selection for male-advantage genes, and against genes posing extreme risks of tumor development. A similar bias against cancer genes should also apply to the Z chromosome that is present as a single copy in female birds. Using comparative database analysis, we found that there was no significant underrepresentation of cancer genes on the chicken Z, nor on the Z-orthologous regions of human chromosomes 5 and 9. This result does not support the hypothesis that genes involved in cancer are selected against on the sex chromosomes.
CITATION STYLE
Stiglec, R., Kohn, M., Fong, J., Ezzaz, T., Hameister, H., & Marshall Graves, J. A. (2007). Frequency of cancer genes on the chicken Z chromosome and its human homologues: Implications for sex chromosome evolution. Comparative and Functional Genomics, 2007. https://doi.org/10.1155/2007/43070
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