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By this point in the biology
playlist, you're probably
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wondering a very natural
question, how is gender
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determined in an organism?
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And it's not an obvious answer,
because throughout the
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animal kingdom, it's actually
determined in different ways.
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In some creatures, especially
some types of reptiles, it's
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environmental.
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Not all reptiles, but
certain cases of it.
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It could be maybe the
temperature in which the
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embryo develops will dictate
whether it turns into a male
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or female or other environmental
factors.
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And in other types of animals,
especially mammals, of which
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we are one example, it's
a genetic basis.
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And so your next question is,
hey, Sal, so-- let me write
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this down, in mammals it's
genetic-- so, OK, maybe
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they're different alleles, a
male or a female allele.
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But then you're like, hey, but
there's so many different
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characteristics that
differentiate
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a man from a woman.
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Maybe it would have to be a
whole set of genes that have
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to work together.
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And to some degree,
your second answer
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would be more correct.
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It's even more than just
a set of genes.
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It's actually whole chromosomes
determine it.
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So let me draw a nucleus.
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That's going to be my nucleus.
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And this is going to be
the nucleus for a man.
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So 22 of the pairs of
chromosomes are just regular
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non-sex-determining
chromosomes.
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So I could just do, that's one
of the homologous, 2, 4, 6, 8,
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10, 12, 14.
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I can just keep going.
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And eventually you
have 22 pairs.
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So these 22 pairs right there,
they're called autosomal.
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And those are just our standard
pairs of chromosomes
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that code for different
things.
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Each of these right here is a
homologous pair, homologous,
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which we learned before
you get one from
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each of your parents.
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They don't necessarily code for
the same thing, for the
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same versions of the genes,
but they code
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for the same genes.
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If eye color is on this gene,
it's also on that gene, on the
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other gene of the
homologous pair.
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Although you might have
different versions of eye
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color on either one and that
determines what you display.
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But these are just kind of the
standard genes that have
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nothing to do with our gender.
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And then you have these two
other special chromosomes.
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I'll do this one.
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It'll be a long brown one, and
then I'll do a short blue one.
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And the first thing you'll
notice is that they don't look
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homologous.
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How could they code for the same
thing when the blue one
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is short and the brown
one's long?
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And that's true.
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They aren't homologous.
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And these we'll call our
sex-determining chromosomes.
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And the long one right here,
it's been the convention to
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call that the x chromosome.
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Let me scroll down
a little bit.
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And the blue one right there,
we refer to that as the y
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chromosome.
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And to figure out whether
something is a male or a
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female, it's a pretty
simple system.
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If you've got a y chromosome,
you are a male.
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So let me write that down.
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So this nucleus that I drew
just here-- obviously you
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could have the whole broader
cell all around here-- this is
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the nucleus for a man.
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So if you have an x chromosome--
and we'll talk
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about in a second why you can
only get that from your mom--
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an x chromosome from your mom
and a y chromosome from your
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dad, you will be a male.
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If you get an x chromosome
from your mom and an x
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chromosome from your dad, you're
going to be a female.
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And so we could actually even
draw a Punnett square.
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This is almost a trivially easy
Punnett square, but it
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kind of shows what all of the
different possibilities are.
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So let's say this is your
mom's genotype for her
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sex-determining chromosome.
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She's got two x's.
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That's what makes her your
mom and not your dad.
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And then your dad has an x and
a y-- I should do it in
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capital-- and has
a Y chromosome.
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And we can do a Punnett
square.
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What are all the different
combinations of offspring?
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Well, your mom could give this
X chromosome, in conjunction
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with this X chromosome
from your dad.
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This would produce a female.
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Your mom could give this other
X chromosome with that X
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chromosome.
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That would be a female
as well.
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Well, your mom's always going
to be donating an X
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chromosome.
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And then your dad is going to
donate either the X or the Y.
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So in this case, it'll
be the Y chromosome.
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So these would be female,
and those would be male.
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And it works out nicely
that half are female
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and half are male.
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But a very interesting and
somewhat ironic fact might pop
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out at you when you see this.
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Who determines whether their
offspring are male or female?
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Is it the mom or the dad?
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Well, the mom always donates an
X chromosome, so in no way
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does what the haploid genetic
makeup of the mom's eggs, of
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the gamete from the female, in
no way does that determine the
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gender of the offspring.
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It's all determined by whether--
let me just draw a
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bunch of-- dad's got a lot of
sperm, and they're all racing
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towards the egg.
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And some of them have an X
chromosome in them and some of
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them have a Y chromosome
in them.
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And obviously they
have others.
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And obviously if this guy
up here wins the race.
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Or maybe I should
say this girl.
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If she wins the race, then the
fertilized egg will develop
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into a female.
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If this sperm wins the race,
then the fertilized egg will
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develop into a male.
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And the reason why I said it's
ironic is throughout history,
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and probably the most famous
example of this
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is Henry the VIII.
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I mean it's not just the
case with kings.
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It's probably true, because most
of our civilization is
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male dominated, that you've had
these men who are obsessed
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with producing a male
heir to kind of take
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over the family name.
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And, in the case of Henry the
VIII, take over a country.
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And they become very
disappointed and they tend to
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blame their wives when the wives
keep producing females,
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but it's all their fault.
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Henry the VIII, I mean
the most famous case
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was with Ann Boleyn.
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I'm not an expert here, but the
general notion is that he
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became upset with her that she
wasn't producing a male heir.
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And then he found a reason
to get her essentially
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decapitated, even though
it was all his fault.
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He was maybe producing a lot
more sperm that looked like
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that than was looking
like this.
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He eventually does produce a
male heir so he was-- and if
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we assume that it was his
child-- then obviously he was
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producing some of these, but for
the most part, it was all
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Henry the VIII's fault.
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So that's why I say there's a
little bit of irony here.
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Is that the people doing the
blame are the people to blame
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for the lack of a male heir.
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Now one question that might
immediately pop up in your
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head is, Sal, is everything on
these chromosomes related to
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just our sex-determining traits
or are there other
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stuff on them?
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So let me draw some
chromosomes.
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So let's say that's an X
chromosome and this is a Y
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chromosome.
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Now the X chromosome, it does
code for a lot more things,
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although it is kind of
famously gene poor.
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It codes for on the order
of 1,500 genes.
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And the Y chromosome, it's the
most gene poor of all the
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chromosomes.
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It only codes for on the
order of 78 genes.
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I just looked this up, but who
knows if it's exactly 78.
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But what it tells you is it does
very little other than
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determining what
the gender is.
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And the way it determines that,
it does have one gene on
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it called the SRY gene.
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You don't have to know that.
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SRY, that plays a role in the
development of testes or the
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male sexual organ.
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So if you have this around, this
gene right here can start
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coding for things that will
eventually lead to the
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development of the testicles.
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And if you don't have that
around, that won't happen, so
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you'll end up with a female.
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And I'm making gross
oversimplifications here.
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But everything I've dealt with
so far, OK, this clearly plays
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a role in determining sex.
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But you do have other traits
on these genes.
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And the famous cases all deal
with specific disorders.
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So, for example, color
blindness.
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The genes, or the mutations
I should say.
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So the mutations that cause
color blindness.
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Red-green color blindness, which
I did in green, which is
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maybe a little bit
inappropriate.
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Color blindness and
also hemophilia.
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This is an inability of
your blood to clot.
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Actually, there's several
types of hemophilia.
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But hemophilia is an
inability for your
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blood to clot properly.
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And both of these are mutations
on the X chromosome.
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And they're recessive
mutations.
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So what does that mean?
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It means both of your X
chromosomes have to have--
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let's take the case for
hemophilia-- both of your X
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chromosomes have to have the
hemophilia mutation in order
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for you to show the phenotype
of having hemophilia.
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So, for example, if there's a
woman, and let's say this is
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her genotype.
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She has one regular X chromosome
and then she has
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one X chromosome that has
the-- I'll put a little
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superscript there for
hemophilia-- she has the
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hemophilia mutation.
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She's just going to
be a carrier.
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Her phenotype right here is
going to be no hemophilia.
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She'll have no problem
clotting her blood.
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The only way that a woman could
be a hemophiliac is if
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she gets two versions of
this, because this
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is a recessive mutation.
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Now this individual will
have hemophilia.
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Now men, they only have
one X chromosome.
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So for a man to exhibit
hemophilia, to have this
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phenotype, he just needs
it only on the one X
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chromosome he has.
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And then the other one's
a Y chromosome.
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So this man will have
hemophilia.
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So a natural question should be
arising is, hey, you know
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this guy-- let's just say that
this is a relatively
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infrequent mutation that arises
on an X chromosome--
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the question is who's more
likely to have hemophilia?
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A male or a female?
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All else equal, who's more
likely to have it?
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Well if this is a relatively
infrequent allele, a female,
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in order to display it, has
to get two versions of it.
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So let's say that the frequency
of it-- and I looked
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it up before this video--
roughly they say between 1 in
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5,000 to 10,000 men exhibit
hemophilia.
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So let's say that the allele
frequency of this is 1 in
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7,000, the frequency of Xh, the
hemophilia version of the
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X chromosome.
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And that's why 1 in 7,000 men
display it, because it's
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completely determined whether--
there's a 1 in 7,000
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chance that this X chromosome
they get is
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the hemophilia version.
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Who cares what the Y chromosome
they get is, cause
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that essentially doesn't code at
all for the blood clotting
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factors and all of the things
that drive hemophilia.
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Now, for a woman to get
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hemophilia, what has to happen?
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She has to have two X
chromosomes with the mutation.
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Well the probability of each of
them having the mutation is
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1 in 7,000.
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So the probability of her having
hemophilia is 1 in
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7,000 times 1 in 7,000, or
that's 1 in what, 49 million.
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So as you can imagine, the
incidence of hemophilia in
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women is much lower than
the incidence of
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hemophilia in men.
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And in general for any
sex-linked trait, if it's
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recessive, if it's a recessive
sex-linked trait, which means
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men, if they have it, they're
going to show it, because they
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don't have another X chromosome
to dominate it.
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Or for women to show
it, she has to have
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both versions of it.
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The incidence in men is going to
be, so let's say that m is
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the incidence in men.
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I'm spelling badly.
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Then the incidence in
women will be what?
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You could view this as the
allele frequency of that
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mutation on the X chromosome.
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So women have to get
two versions of it.
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So the woman's frequency
is m squared.
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And you might say, hey, that
looks like a bigger number.
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I'm squaring it.
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But you have to remember that
these numbers, the frequency
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is less than 1, so in the
case of hemophilia,
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that was 1 in 7,000.
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So if you square 1 in 7,000,
you get 1 in 49 million.
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Anyway, hopefully you found that
interesting and now you
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know how we all become
men and women.
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And even better you know whom to
blame when some of these, I
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guess, male-focused parents
are having trouble
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getting their son.
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