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Studies
expand understanding of X chromosome
NIH-supported research sheds new light on the role of
sex chromosomes in health and disease
BETHESDA, Md., Wed., March 16 – The National Institutes
of Health (NIH) hailed the first comprehensive analysis of
the sequence of the human X chromosome, saying that this provides
sweeping new insights into the evolution of sex chromosomes
and the biological differences between males and females.
These studies, a detailed analysis of the X chromosome's DNA
sequence and a survey of its gene activity, are published
in the current issue of the journal Nature.
"These detailed analyses of the X chromosome represent
a monumental achievement for biology and medicine. They are
exciting examples of what is being learned from the vast trove
of sequence data produced by the Human Genome Project and
made freely available to researchers around the world,"
said Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., director of National
Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), part of NIH, which
led the U.S. component of the Human Genome Project along with
the Department of Energy.
The
sequencing work on the X chromosome was carried out as part
of the Human Genome Project at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
in Hinxton, England; Baylor College of Medicine, Houston;
Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis; the Max
Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin; the Institute
of Molecular Biotechnology, Jena, Germany; and Applied Biosystems,
Inc., Foster City, CA.
In
the first study, an international team of more than 250 genomic
researchers led by the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute described
an analysis of the complete DNA sequence of the human X chromosome.
In humans and other mammals, sexual identity is governed by
a pair of chromosomes referred to as "X" and "Y."
Females have two X chromosomes, while males have one X chromosome
and one Y chromosome.
One
of the central goals of the effort to analyze the human genome
is the identification of all genes, which are generally defined
as stretches of DNA that code for particular proteins. The
new analysis confirmed the existence of 1,098 protein-coding
genes on the X chromosome. Only 54 of the 1,098 genes have
functional counterparts on the much smaller Y chromosome,
which has been described as an "eroded" version
of the X chromosome. Interestingly, almost 10 percent of the
genes on the X chromosome are part of a somewhat mysterious
family of "cancer-testis antigens," which are normally
expressed in the testis but also appear in certain cancers,
making them possible targets for immunotherapy.
The
X chromosome's gene density is among the lowest for the human
chromosomes that have been analyzed to date. Researchers say
this may reflect a low density of genes on the ancestral chromosome
that gave rise to the X chromosome, or it may indicate that
genes coding for key proteins that are required in double
dose were transferred from the X chromosome to other chromosomes
during the course of mammalian evolution.
Despite
its relatively low gene density, the X chromosome holds a
prominent place in the study and understanding of human disease.
This arises from the fact that any defects in genes on the
X chromosome are often apparent in males because the Y does
not carry corresponding genes to compensate. More than 300
diseases already have been mapped to the X chromosome, and
though the X chromosome contains only 4 percent of all human
genes, it accounts for almost 10 percent of inherited diseases
caused by a single gene, which doctors often refer to as Mendelian
disorders. These "X-linked" disorders include red-green
color blindness, hemophilia, varied forms of mental retardation
and Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
"From
studying such genes, we can get remarkable insight into disease
processes. But the importance of the sequence goes beyond
individual genes. We have also gained a deep insight into
the way evolution has shaped the chromosomes that determine
our gender to give them unique properties," said Mark
Ross, Ph.D., project leader at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute.
The
research team compared the human X chromosome to the genome
sequences of a variety of other organisms, including dog,
rat, mouse and chicken. They found that the gene order of
the human and dog X chromosomes were virtually identical.
Comparing gene order in the human and rodent sequences showed
several segments had reshuffled in the rodent lineage, and
an interesting, 9 million base pair region appears to have
been deleted from the rodent chromosome after humans and rodents
diverged from their common ancestor.
Of
particular interest was the comparison of the human X chromosome
to the sequence of the chicken. Most of the genes on the short
arm of the human X are found on chicken chromosome 1, and
most of the genes on the long arm of the human X are found
on chicken chromosome 4. These findings support the idea that
mammalian X and Y chromosomes evolved from an "ordinary"
ancestral pair of identical chromosomes.
The
second study, which was supported by the NIH's National Institute
of General Medical Sciences, focused on the activity of a
large set of genes on the X chromosome. Researchers at the
Duke University Institute for Genome Sciences & Policy
in Durham, N.C., and Pennsylvania State University in University
Park surveyed the activity, or expression, of 471 genes on
the X chromosomes of 40 women. To their surprise, they found
that each woman's X chromosomes showed a unique pattern of
gene expression.
More
than 45 years ago, researchers discovered that most genes
on one copy of a female's X chromosome are switched off –
a modification known as X-inactivation. This mechanism thus
reduced the level of female expression of genes on the X chromosome
to the same level as that in an XY male. Initially, it was
thought the process resulted in a complete inactivation, or
"silencing," of all of the genes on that copy of
the chromosome in a female. However, in the late 1980s, researchers
learned that some fraction of the genes remain active. The
new work extends those findings to the complete set of X-linked
genes.
Specifically,
the researchers determined that due to the incomplete nature
of X-inactivation, at least 15 percent of genes on the X chromosome
produced proteins at higher, often variable, levels in females
than in males. Furthermore, in some women but not in others,
an additional 10 percent of the X-linked genes are expressed
at variable levels.
Much
more work is needed to explore the implications of the new
findings for human health and disease. However, Duke's Huntington
Willard, Ph.D., senior author of the study, said, "We
now know that up to 25 percent of the X chromosome can be
uniquely expressed in one sex relative to the other. Such
differences should be recognized as a potential factor to
explain sex-specific traits, both in complex disease as well
as normal gender differences."
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