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  Evaluating Your Fertility
  Understanding Fertility
  The Basics of Life
  DNA
  Cell Division
  Sexual Differentiation
  Anatomy & Function
  Ovulation
  Sperm Production
  Importance of Hormones
  Maximise Your Fertility
  Infertility: An Introduction
  Infertility in Females
  Infertility in Males
  Implications of Infertility
  Questions to Ask Your Doctor
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Sexual Differentiation

Sexual differentiation is the process by which an organism develops into a male or a female. The 23 pairs of chromosomes in human cells include a pair of sex chromosomes, so-called because they determine whether a zygote develops into a male or female. The father’s chromosomes are responsible for sex determination.

There are two types of sex chromosomes: the X type and the Y type. A zygote containing a pair of X chromosomes develops into a female, but a zygote with an X and Y chromosome develops into a male. Thus, the normal sex chromosome complement for women is XX and for men, XY. This means that the gametes produced by meiotic cell division in the female (the ova or oocytes) all contain a single X chromosome. However, half of the sperms produced by the male will contain an X chromosome and half will contain a Y chromosome. The following figure explains how the two types of zygote are produced.
 

Y chromosomes are smaller than X chromosomes and differ in a fundamental way. The genes on the Y chromosome are concerned solely with sex determination. Their presence ensures a male, their absence a female. The X chromosome, occurring in both sexes, contains many genes vital to general development and functioning. Absence of the X chromosome is incompatible with life.

Chromosomal Disorders
  
Disorders can arise if there is an abnormal number of sex chromosomes. Most people carry two sex chromosomes in their cell. However, some can carry one more, or one less, X chromosome. An example of this is Turner’s syndrome, which is caused by a missing X chromosome and affects females only. Although full female sexual characteristics never develop, these people are unmistakably female in appearance and identity. Full female sexual characteristics develop only in the presence of a second X chromosome.

A second sex chromosome disorder is Klinefelter’s syndrome, which only affects males and is caused by one or more extra X chromosomes. In this case, the condition often passes unnoticed until puberty, when breast enlargement occurs and the testes remain small, with the body shape looking female rather than male.

Genes are easily damaged in cell division, but because each cell contains one chromosome from the mother and one from the father, if the gene from the mother is damaged or missing, that from the father can usually be ‘read’ and ensures normal functioning of the cell. However, because the X chromosome is longer than the Y chromosome, it contains some genes which are not duplicated in the Y chromosome. Thus, most other sex-linked traits or disorders are caused by abnormal genes on the X chromosome.

In females, abnormal or damaged genes on one X chromosome are usually masked by a normal gene on the other X chromosome; males have only a single X chromosome, so no such masking takes place. As a result, X-linked traits or disorders affect males much more frequently than females. Examples of such conditions include haemophilia, Duchenne muscular dystrophy and colour vision deficiency.
 


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Last Updated: 5/6/2008

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