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The weird history of the "sex chromosomes"

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    OK.
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    So we are going to start in 1891,
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    when a German scientist
    was looking through a microscope
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    at insect cells.
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    And he saw something kind of funny.
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    At the center of the cells,
    there was this dark stuff.
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    No one had ever seen it before.
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    And he noticed that as the cells
    would multiply and divide,
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    it would go into some of the new cells,
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    but not the others.
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    He didn't know what it was,
    so he gave it a really great name.
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    He called it the "X element."
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    (Laughter)
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    And he was like,
    "We'll just fill in that X later."
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    And then, fast-forward 10 years later,
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    and there is an American scientist,
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    and she is looking through her microscope,
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    also at insect cells.
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    And she sees something funny.
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    There's more of this dark stuff.
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    And it's kind of tiny,
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    it's hanging out near the X element.
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    And eventually, someone was like,
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    "Well, if that one thing's called X,
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    should we call this other thing Y?"
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    And like that, (Snaps fingers)
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    the sex chromosomes had been discovered.
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    So chromosomes,
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    you probably all know what they are,
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    but I will tell you anyways.
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    They're made up of DNA --
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    everything has it,
    it's the blueprint of life,
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    we've got rats, we've got trees,
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    we've got insects, we've got humans.
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    And in the case of human chromosomes,
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    geneticist Melissa Wilson
    broke it down for me like this.
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    (Audio) Melissa Wilson: Typically,
    you'll get one copy of every chromosome
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    from your genetic mom
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    and one copy of every chromosome
    from your genetic dad,
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    and we have 22 of these
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    that you get one copy from mom
    and one copy from dad.
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    And then there's the 23rd pair, X and Y.
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    Molly Webster: So while all
    the other chromosomes are numbered,
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    one through 22,
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    we do not call X and Y 23.
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    I like to think that they are waiting
    for, like, a LeBron James to come along.
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    But in this instance, they were like,
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    "We're just going to keep the letters,
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    and then we'll give them a title."
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    They called them the sex chromosomes.
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    Now I would wager
    that in the United States,
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    these are the most well-known chromosomes,
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    for one simple fact:
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    that we say X equals "girl,"
    and Y equals "boy" --
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    that they are responsible for sex.
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    And -- and I had to learn this --
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    but when I'm talking about "sex" here,
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    I'm talking about the way biology
    gives us gonads,
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    which are our ovaries and our testes --
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    I'm not talking about gender,
    which is how we identify.
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    And so, as a reporter at the show --
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    "Radiolab," the audio documentary
    program I work for --
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    I was like, what's up
    with these sex chromosomes?
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    You know, that's kind of my job,
    I think things are weird,
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    and then I get to call people about them
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    and ask questions,
    and then hopefully, they answer.
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    And in this case,
    a lot of people answered.
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    And in the two years I had
    of reporting on X and Y,
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    as part of "Gonads,"
    the series on sex and gender
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    I ended up doing for "Radiolab,"
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    I found out that these two chromosomes
    live in a world that is unexpected,
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    a little unsettling;
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    where things that I thought were facts
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    were, like, twisted in ways
    I hadn't seen before.
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    And the world goes so far
    beyond the boundaries of sex,
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    I was like,
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    "Maybe we should all talk about this."
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    So, you're you all,
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    we're all going to talk about it.
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    And for me,
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    the true story of X and Y
    starts with their name.
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    So within years of being discovered,
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    these two little chromosomes
    had acquired more than 10 different names.
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    There was diplosome and heterochromosome
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    and idiochromosome,
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    and most of the names had to do
    with their structure, their shape,
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    their size.
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    And then there was "sex chromosome,"
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    which they had been given
    because of the fact
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    that we had started seeing that the X
    would go with the females,
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    and the Y would often go with the males.
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    But scientists were like,
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    "Do we really want
    to call them sex chromosomes?"
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    And science historian Sarah Richardson
    is the one who told me this story.
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    (Audio) Sarah Richardson:
    For three decades, scientists were like,
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    "You should not call them
    the sex chromosomes.
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    The X and Y have many functions,
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    and you wouldn't assume
    that a single chromosome
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    controls a single trait.
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    Imagine calling one chromosome
    the 'urogenital chromosome,'
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    or the 'liver chromosome.'"
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    Scientists, if you dig into the history --
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    it's really cool, you should --
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    were hesitant to, like,
    commit to such a specific name,
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    and such a powerfully connotated name.
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    There was a fear that it would
    actually be really limiting --
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    maybe to science, maybe to society --
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    but the fear was in the room.
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    And you can see they ended up
    getting "sex chromosome" --
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    it's like a pretty juicy title,
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    it popularized genetics, you know?
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    But in the 100-year history
    since we settled on that name,
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    you can see it starts
    to get a little complicated.
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    So around 1960 --
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    this is going to be our first stop
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    on he complicated world
    of the sex chromosomes --
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    so around 1960,
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    we had discovered that you could be XYY.
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    They discovered an XYY man.
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    And to digress a little here,
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    it turns out that the model
    of "X equals girl and Y equals boy"
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    is really simplistic.
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    You can actually be a whole bunch
    of different combinations of X and Y,
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    giving you, like, different types
    of biological sex.
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    You could be two Xs and two Ys together.
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    You could be four Xs,
    you could be five Xs,
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    you could be XO.
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    And so I thought that was pretty crazy,
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    because I was like,
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    "Wow, this really upends
    a model of biological sex
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    I think most of us in this room
    have been taught."
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    So a few years after they realized
    that you can be XYY,
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    researchers go to a prison in Scotland
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    and they do genetic analysis
    of a bunch of the male prisoners.
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    And they find a number
    of people who are XYY.
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    And according to Sarah:
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    (Audio) SR: They just rushed
    to publish a theory
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    suggesting that this extra Y chromosome
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    could explain criminality in some men."
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    Yeah.
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    So the logic goes like this:
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    By this point, we're thinking Y is male.
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    We think male is aggressive,
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    so Y must be aggression.
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    If you've got an extra Y,
    you must be crazy.
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    And like, we went nuts with this theory.
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    We called it the supermale,
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    they started scanning more prisoners,
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    serial killers, boys.
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    And in all seriousness,
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    there was actually a suggestion
    that we consider aborting XYY fetuses.
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    So in 1980,
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    this theory pretty much toppled,
    for a number of reasons.
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    One,
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    there had been this really large study
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    that basically showed
    there was no connection
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    between Y and violence,
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    I think we all saw that coming.
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    And then, there was one other thing.
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    (Audio) SR: Going back
    and looking at those original findings
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    in that high-security
    psychiatric institution,
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    they had also found
    a high number of individuals
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    with an extra X chromosome.
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    So these are XXY, as opposed to XYY.
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    MW: Really?
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    SR: Yeah. Now, they never claimed
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    that the individuals
    with an extra X chromosome
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    were superfemales.
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    They never investigated
    whether they had higher rates of violence.
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    MW: Seems like kind of an oversight.
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    I don't know.
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    But I think it's interesting,
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    because what you see is if you start
    looking at these chromosomes
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    through the lens of sex,
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    what naturally falls in place behind
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    is we look at them
    through the lens of gender,
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    and the traits
    that we associate with gender.
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    So men were violent,
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    and Y explained why they were in prison.
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    The X did not do that,
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    because like, you know, what's X?
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    We don't associate it with violence.
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    And while we don't believe
    in supermales today --
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    God, I hope we don't --
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    we don't believe in supermales today,
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    there is a very similar conversation
    that's still happening
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    around inherent violence
    in boys and biology.
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    So my next stop
    on the weird world of X and Y
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    or things feeling
    a little topsy-turvy, is 1985.
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    The World University Games
    were set to happen in Japan,
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    and the Spanish hurdler María José
    Martínez-Patiño was scheduled to run.
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    She was like a hot shot,
    a rising superstar.
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    And the night before her race,
    they had her DNA scanned.
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    Now at the time, this was a thing
    that they were doing,
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    because they were like,
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    "OK, we don't want men
    covertly racing as women,
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    so we're going to scan the women
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    and make sure all their Xs line up."
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    And so I heard this story
    from Ruth Padawer
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    who was a New York Times Magazine reporter
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    and she reported on María.
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    (Audio) Ruth Padawer: So they tell her
    the chromosome test results were abnormal.
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    Although on the outside,
    she was fully female,
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    she had XY chromosomes
    and these internal testes.
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    They were like,
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    "We hate to break it to you, María,
    but you're actually a dude.
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    You can't race with the ladies."
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    (Audio) RP: And so she's thrown
    off the national team,
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    she's expelled from
    the athletes' residence,
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    she's denied her scholarship,
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    a bunch of her friends dump her,
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    fellow athletes abandon her,
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    she loses her medals,
    her records are revoked.
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    So it turns out --
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    remember when I told you
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    it can be a bunch of different
    combinations of X and Y --
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    you can also be XY and be female.
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    You can be XX and male.
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    In María's case, she was something called
    androgen insensitive.
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    Which means that she did have
    some sort of internal testes --
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    they were making testosterone --
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    but her body couldn't use it.
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    And so if you thought of testosterone
    as, like, a superpower,
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    she was not benefiting from it.
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    And so eventually,
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    sports authorities, like, let her back in,
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    but her career was done.
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    And in this instance you see how,
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    if you assign sex
    to a specific place in the body,
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    or at least, like,
    this is what I saw, right?
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    If you assign sex
    to a specific place in the body,
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    it somehow makes us think
    that we can go into a body,
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    look at a specific place
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    and tell someone we know
    something more about them
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    than they know about themselves.
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    And that feels terrifying to me.
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    And we don't genetically test
    female athletes anymore,
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    but you can see very similar
    conversations happening
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    when we talk about testosterone in sports,
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    you can also see it in suggestions
    that we take transgender individuals
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    and we genetically analyze them
    and we tell them who they are.
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    That is real,
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    that is a conversation
    that has happened recently.
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    The last place that I'll share with you
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    where these chromosomes
    got complicated for me,
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    is this one thing that Melissa told me.
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    (Audio) MW: You can't survive
    without an X chromosome.
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    No matter your gonads,
    no matter your identity,
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    every single human being
    has to have an X chromosome,
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    because without one,
    the rest of your body doesn't develop.
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    MW: Why do we call this
    the female chromosome?
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    OK, this is something
    I had never though about,
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    but literally, every single person
    in this audience has an X chromosome,
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    I'm not lying.
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    Every single person on the planet
    has an X chromosome,
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    but no one is going around like,
    "This is the every-person chromosome."
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    You know?
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    Like, somehow it's over here,
    the Y is over there,
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    and they must be really different,
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    and I'm just like,
    it would be so much better
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    if it was the every-person chromosome.
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    And not just because I'm like,
    love you all and I want you all in,
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    but because of what we're overlooking
    by the fact that we consider it female.
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    Because I'm going to tell you
    one of the craziest things I found out.
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    Which is, when you think
    about the X chromosome,
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    of the almost 1,100 genes
    on the X chromosome,
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    how many do you think have to do
    with sex and reproduction?
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    Like, get a number in your head.
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    Four percent.
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    That means 96 percent
    of the rest of that chromosome
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    is doing something that has nothing
    to do with your gonads.
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    And I guess as all of these,
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    sort of, some of them social stories,
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    some of them scientific stories,
    some of these facts,
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    started to add up, I just thought, like,
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    why are we calling these
    the sex chromosomes?
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    Or if we are, like,
    maybe we all like that name,
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    should we just allow ourselves
    to think about them
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    a little more broadly?
  • 12:37 - 12:39
    Because if we do,
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    like, what insights would we gain,
    as people, as scientists?
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    And we're at this point
    where we're thinking about, like,
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    how do we want to teach science,
  • 12:48 - 12:49
    what do we want to fund,
  • 12:49 - 12:51
    like, who do we want to be
    as a society, you know?
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    And I just wondered if it wasn't a moment
    to rethink the biology of X and Y,
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    and at the very least,
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    to remember, like,
    the footnotes of history,
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    which is that the dude who came up
    with the phrase "sex chromosome,"
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    actually was like, "Hey, everyone,
    just remember, this is just,"
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    and I quote, "a form of shorthand."
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    We should not take it literally.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The weird history of the "sex chromosomes"
Speaker:
Molly Webster
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:34

English subtitles

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