[Sex chromosomes and meiosis]

Gynecol Obstet Fertil. 2009 Nov-Dec;37(11-12):895-900. doi: 10.1016/j.gyobfe.2009.09.004. Epub 2009 Oct 12.
[Article in French]

Abstract

Sex chromosome behaviour fundamentally differs between male and female meiosis. In oocyte, X chromosomes synapse giving a XX bivalent which is not recognizable in their morphology and behaviour from autosomal bivalents. In human male, X and Y chromosomes differ from one another in their morphology and their genetic content, leading to a limited pairing and preventing genetic recombination, excepted in homologous region PAR1. During pachytene stage of the first meiotic prophase, X and Y chromosomes undergo a progressive condensation and form a transcriptionally silenced peripheral XY body. The condensation of the XY bivalent during pachytene stage led us to describe four pachytene substages and to localize the pachytene checkpoint between substages 2 and 3. We also defined the pachytene index (PI=P1+P2/P1+P2+P3+P4) which is always less than 0.50 in normal meiosis. XY body undergoes decondensation at diplotene stage, but transcriptional inactivation of the two sex chromosomes or Meiotic Sex Chromosome Inactivation (MSCI) persists through to the end of spermatogenesis. Sex chromosome inactivation involves several proteins, some of them were now identified. Two isoforms of the HP1 protein, HP1beta and HP1gamma, are involved in the facultative heterochromatinization of the XY body, but the initiation of this process involves the phosphorylation of the protein H2AX by the kinase ATR whose recruitment depends on BRCA1. Extensive researches on the inactivation of the sex chromosomes during male meiosis will allow to a better understanding of some male infertilities.

MeSH terms

  • Chromobox Protein Homolog 5
  • Chromosomes, Human, X / physiology
  • Chromosomes, Human, Y / physiology
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Meiosis / physiology*
  • Ovary / physiology
  • Recombination, Genetic
  • Sex Chromosomes / physiology*
  • Spermatocytes / physiology