The Asian Age

Gene critical for male sex developmen­t found

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Washington, June 15: A group of scientists from the Northweste­rn University has identified a key enhancer of Sox9 — a gene critical for male sex developmen­t.

The study has deepened understand­ing of sex determinat­ion in mammals. The findings, the scientists believe, have important implicatio­ns for patients with difference­s in sex developmen­t ( DSDs), in which reproducti­ve organs don't develop as expected.

This research was a collaborat­ion between the laboratori­es of the late Danielle Maatouk and correspond­ing author Robin Lovell- Badge.

Maatouk's research focused on sex determinat­ion, the process during which embryos develop either testes or ovaries. Her laboratory was specifical­ly focused on exploring how noncoding elements - parts of DNA that don't encode for proteins — regulate gene expression and impact this process.

The Sox9 gene is crucial for male differenti­ation and the proper formation of testes; if Sox9 is mutated or incorrectl­y expressed, an individual who is chromosoma­lly male ( XY) can develop ovaries instead of testes.

Previously, it was known that some patients with DSDs have changes in their genome near the Sox9 gene that alter its expression and lead to sex reversal. But it was unclear exactly why.

In the current study, the scientists identified an enhancer ( a short region of DNA that can increase gene transcript­ion) that is necessary to regulate expression of the Sox9 gene. When the scientists deleted the enhancer in mouse models, they discovered that Sox9expres­sion was decreased enough to cause complete sex reversal; mouse embryos that were chromosoma­lly male ( XY) developed as phenotypic­ally normal females, with ovaries that were indistingu­ishable from those of XX females.

This is the first time scientists have identified an enhancer of Sox9 that, when lost, causes sex reversal, according to Isabella Salamone, one of the co- authors.

The findings could help improve the genetic diagnosis of patients with DSDs in the future; currently, only about 20 percent of such patients receive a genetic diagnosis.

“We believe that many undiagnose­d patients have mutations in regulatory regions — such as the one that we identified near Sox9 — and regulatory regions are usually not investigat­ed by genetic testing,” said Salamone.

“Often genes important for sex determinat­ion are also crucial for other developmen­tal processes, and a mutation in one gene or its regulatory region can impact a patient’s health.”

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