The Y Chromosome May Be Vanishing, What could this be for Male?
The Y Chromosome Could Be Vanishing. What Could This Mean for Males? “In 11 million years, a visitor to Earth might discover that humans have either become extinct or evolved into various distinct species.”
The Y chromosome, a fundamental aspect of human genetics and a determinant of the male sex has been a subject of intense study and speculation. Recent research suggests that the Y chromosome is slowly vanishing, which could have profound implications for the future of sex determination in humans and; indeed, perhaps for the continuation of the species.
For millions of years, the Y chromosome has been diminishing in size and genetic content. This diminution has led to the hypothesis that, if the trend continues, the Y chromosome could disappear entirely, potentially within the next few million years. This prospect raises questions about the future of male sex determination and the evolution of new genetic mechanisms to replace the vanishing Y chromosome.
This would not be the first time that the Y chromosome has undergone considerable changes throughout human evolution. Within the past 166 million years, “the human Y lost most of its 1,600-odd genes, a rate of nearly 10 per million years,” The Conversation said. While the X chromosome contains approximately 900 genes with multiple functions, the Y has approximately only 55 genes with only 27 of them being male-specific.
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The most important part of the Y chromosome is the master sex gene called SRY, which triggers a fetus’ development as a male. Jenny Graves, a sex chromosome geneticist at La Trobe University in Melbourne, said to Newsweek, “The Y makes no sense in terms of function, but is easy to understand in terms of evolution”.
Graves explains that “The X and Y were once upon a time just an ordinary pair of chromosomes. Then one partner acquired a variant gene (SRY) that determines maleness.” So what happens if the Y disappears? “When humans run out of Y chromosome, they might become extinct…or they might evolve a new sex gene that defines new sex chromosomes,” Graves said. The process, like all evolutionary adaptations, would take millions of years.
Interestingly, nature has already provided examples of species adapting to the loss of the Y chromosome. Certain rodent species, such as the mole voles of Eastern Europe and the spiny rats of Japan, have survived the complete disappearance of their Y chromosomes. These species have developed alternative methods for determining male sex, suggesting that life can find a way to adapt and continue in the absence of the Y chromosome.
The discovery of a new male-determining gene in the spiny rat represents a significant breakthrough in understanding how species can adapt to the loss of traditional sex chromosomes. This gene, which has taken over the role of the SRY gene typically found on the Y chromosome, demonstrates the adaptability of genetic systems and the potential for evolutionary innovation.
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Yet the implications of a disappearing Y chromosome are vast and varied, including the potential emergence of a new human species, although at this point in history that is pure speculation. The evolution of different sex-determination systems is a more likely possibility, as already suggested by the spiny rat’s adaptation.
The science journal The Conversation suggests that “if someone visited Earth in 11 million years, they might find no humans – or several different human species, kept apart by their different sex determination systems.”
The future holds many possibilities. The ongoing research into this phenomenon is not only fascinating but also crucial in understanding evolution’s many dynamic mechanisms that over time, have allowed the human species to not only endure but thrive.