A Deadly Inheritance ■ 141
The SRY gene does not act alone; in both
males and females, other genes on the auto-
somes and sex chromosomes directly influence
the development of the sexual characteristics
that distinguish men and women. Still, the SRY
gene plays a crucial role because when present,
it causes other genes to produce male sexual
characteristics, but when absent, those genes
produce female sexual characteristics. Individ-
uals that have XY chromosomal makeup but a
nonfunctional SRY gene are considered inter-
sex; they are not reproductively functional males
or females, although they appear phenotypically
female (Figure 8.8).
Interestingly, there are no well-documented
cases of disease-causing Y-linked genes. X chro-
mosomes, however, contain genes known to
be involved in many human genetic traits and
located on the X chromosome, while only about
60 are located on the much smaller Y chromo-
some. These 1,240 genes are said to be sex-linked.
Sex-linked genes on the X chromosome are
X-l i n ke d. Sex-linked genes on the Y chromosome
are Y- l i n k e d. One of these Y-linked genes is the
SRY gene (short for “sex-determining region of
Y”). SRY functions as the “master sex switch,”
committing the sex of the developing embryo to
male. In the absence of this gene, a human embryo
develops as a female.
Figure 8.8
Advocates for intersex youth: interACT
Founded by attorney Anne Tamar-Mattis in 2006 under the name “Advocates
for Informed Choice,” interACT was created with a focused mission of ending
harmful medical interventions on intersex children. Its mission statement reads
“interACT uses innovative legal and other strategies, to advocate for the human
rights of children born with intersex traits.”
Paternal
homologue
AA =
r
P
A
b
c
r
P
A
b
C
Homozygous
dominant
Three gene pairs at
three different loci
bb =Homozygous
recessive
Cc = Heterozygous
Maternal
homologue
In a pair of homologous chromosomes,
one is inherited from the male parent,
and the other from the female parent.
A genetic locus is
the location of a
particular gene on
a chromosome.
At each genetic
locus, an
individual has two
alleles, one on
each homologous
chromosome.
Figure 8.7
Genetic loci on homologous
chromosomes
The genes shown here take up a larger portion of
the chromosome than they would if they were drawn
to scale. The average human chromosome has more
than a thousand different genes interspersed with
large stretches of noncoding DNA.
Q1: How do we know whether two
chromosomes are homologous?
Q2: In one sentence, explain how the terms
“gene,” “locus,” and “chromosome” are related.
Q3: If hair color were determined by a
single gene, what would be an example of
the gene’s alleles?