SCI DNA previously written off as 'junk' actually determines genitals at birth

Melodi

Disaster Cat
DNA previously written off as 'junk' actually determines genitals at birth

Loss of unessential DNA section which boosts sex determining gene causes male mice to develop female genitals and ovaries

Alex Matthews-King Health Correspondent
foetus.jpg

Study could shine light on disorders of sexual development ( Rex )

A small snippet of “junk” DNA which was previously thought not to play any essential role in humans may be the difference between being born male or female, UK researchers have found.

In 1991 scientists made a female mouse develop as a male by inserting the Sry gene - short for sex-determining region Y - into the developing embryo. Showing a single gene change could determine our sex.

Now, research published in leading journal Science, shows there is another equally important instruction located in a seemingly unrelated part of our DNA manual which, if removed, results in a genetically male mouse develop female genitals and ovaries.


This newly discovered section, called enhancer 13, massively boosts the signal from Sry to the gonads, which start off as neither male nor female, and ensures they become testes and trigger other male traits.

It also has an equivalent in the human genetic code and may help explain why people missing genes in this area may be born with partially-formed genitals ones that do not conform to their gender, the researchers said.

“It’s finely balanced, it needs to go one way or the other,” Professor Robin Lovell-Badge, who heads the research team at London’s Francis Crick Institute and first identified Sry 27 years ago, told The Independent.

“Sry is there and it starts the process, then you immediately get all these mechanisms that reinforce it, like enhancer 13."

Once the testes have developed they can release testosterone, the male sex hormone, which floods the other bodily tissues and directs them to form the penis and underpins further changes in puberty.

If this process isn’t followed all the way through it could mean the outward genitals don’t fully form, or the foetus begins to develop as female.



Just two per cent of the three billion points of human DNA include all the instructions for our cells to develop from embryo to adult and keeping our bodies running.

These genes each give an instruction to create a particular protein, which perform all the tasks in our cells and allow them to work together in larger structures of the organs.

In Sry’s case it gives the instructions for a protein called SOX9 which is released in a precision burst to tip the gonads into developing as testes.

“In the mouse we know it only acts for a few hours,” Professor Lovell-Badge added. “It’s a pathetic little gene, it wakes up, gives an order and goes back to sleep – one could argue it’s a typical male.

Enhancer 13 is part of the 98 per cent of the DNA which doesn’t contain any protein-coding genes, but despite being 500,000 letters away in the DNA instruction manual it triggers precisely alongside Sry to boost levels of SOX9.


Though multiple enhancer areas usually work in tandem, with no single one having much effect, experimental mice with only the enhancer 13 section of their DNA experienced sex reversal from male to female.

The study’s first author, Dr Nitzan Gonen, said: “Our study highlights the important role of what some still refer to as ‘junk’ DNA, which makes up 98 per cent of our genome.

“If a single enhancer can have this impact on sex determination, other non-coding regions might have similarly drastic effects.


“For decades, researchers have looked for genes that cause disorders of sex development but we haven’t been able to find the genetic cause for over half of them.”

As well as using this information to understand these conditions, Professor Lovell-Badge thinks it could point to how much of our human DNA has actually been handed down from our earliest ancestors.

“Mammals general don’t change sex, but perhaps it’s an evolutionary relic," he told

“There are species of fish that can change sex and do so multiple times. So we’re basically fish and we have to be pushed one direction or the other.”
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...ment-male-female-ovaries-testes-a8399091.html
 

homecanner1

Veteran Member
they called it junk knowing full well its vital necessity as they want it removed so we are all genderless mongoloid mutts in the future. there is no junk dna, if nature put it in the genome, its there for a reason.
 

LightEcho

Has No Life - Lives on TB
they called it junk knowing full well its vital necessity as they want it removed so we are all genderless mongoloid mutts in the future. there is no junk dna, if nature put it in the genome, its there for a reason.

They just publicly admitted that Crisper- CRSPR technology is totally flawed and causes cancer. The brilliant researchers found a way to dissolve what was considered defective DNA- and probably is, and replace it with a palindromic strip. The strip turns out to be imperfect and deadly.


CRISPR Therapeutics' stock tumbles after report that edited genes might seed tumors

Published: June 11, 2018 12:03 p.m. ET

Shares of CRISPR Therapeutics AG CRSP, -0.07% tumbled 12% in active midday trade Monday, after a STAT report that edited cells might cause cancer. Volume spiked to 3.1 million shares, already nearly double the full-day average of about 1.7 million shares. CRISPR Therapeutics is a gene editing company that develops treatments for serious diseases using its proprietary CRISPR/Cas9 platform, which allow precise and directed changes to genomic DNA. The STAT report said that in studies published in Nature Medicine, scientists found that cells in which genomes were edited by CRISPR-Cas9 had the potential to seed tumors inside a patient. CRISPR was not immediately available for comment. The stock, which went public in October 2016 at an initial public offering price of $14, closed at a record $73.59 on May 30. It has rocketed 156% year to date, while the S&P 500 SPX, -0.47% has gained 4.3%. Separately, shares of Intellia Therapeutics Inc. NTLA, +0.50% also a genome-editing company using the CRISPR/Cas9 system, dropped 8.2%.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/c...hat-edited-genes-might-seed-tumors-2018-06-11

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CRISPR is an abbreviation of Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats.[3] The name was minted at a time when the origin and use of the interspacing subsequences were not known. At that time the CRISPRs were described as segments of prokaryotic DNA containing short, repetitive base sequences. In a palindromic repeat, the sequence of nucleotides is the same in both directions. Each repetition is followed by short segments of spacer DNA from previous exposures to foreign DNA (e.g., a virus or plasmid).[4][5] Small clusters of cas (CRISPR-associated system) genes are located next to CRISPR sequences.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
they want it removed so we are all genderless mongoloid mutts

Yep.

No genitals, no uncontrolled breeding.

The assault on boys is heading for the womb ...
 

hax0r212

Contributing Member
Its as much "junk" as the "extra" pieces you are left with after assembling something and not reading the instructions (or not understanding the poorly written instructions).
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
I can see where they mess around and have the poor mouse with some seriously over sized junk.
 
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