Literature DB >> 20521165

First wild XXY house mice.

Heidi C Hauffe1, Mabel D Giménez, Silvia Garagna, Jeremy B Searle.   

Abstract

Laboratory house mice (Mus musculus) with the XXY condition can be generated with ease and have been used as a biomedical model. However, although the XXY constitution has been described in humans and many domestic and wild mammal species, and a very large number of wild house mice have been karyotyped previously, no wild individuals of M. musculus with an XXY karyotype have ever been reported. Therefore, it is rather extraordinary that two wild XXY house mice were caught by us on two different farms in northern Italy in 2008. Except for the extra X chromosome, one male had a standard karyotype (2n = 40) and the other, the karyotype of the Cremona metacentric population (2n = 22). In this paper, the phenotype of these two individuals is described. Observations for both of these wild males agree with those of laboratory XXY mice, i.e., they had a normal body mass and appearance, but significantly smaller testes than normal, and no visible germ cells. The incidence of the XXY chromosome anomaly in wild mice (two among 5,123 wild mice surveyed by us and our colleagues, i.e., approximately 0.08% among wild-caught males) is intermediate between that found in male laboratory mice (approximately 0.04%) and that found in male humans (0.2%).

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20521165     DOI: 10.1007/s10577-010-9135-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chromosome Res        ISSN: 0967-3849            Impact factor:   5.239


  29 in total

1.  Is the prevalence of Klinefelter syndrome increasing?

Authors:  Joan K Morris; Eva Alberman; Claire Scott; Patricia Jacobs
Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet       Date:  2007-11-14       Impact factor: 4.246

2.  Spermiogenesis of rat, mouse, hamster and guinea pig as revealed by the periodic acid-fuchsin sulfurous acid technique.

Authors:  C P LEBLOND; Y CLERMONT
Journal:  Am J Anat       Date:  1952-03

Review 3.  Meiosis and sex chromosome aneuploidy: how meiotic errors cause aneuploidy; how aneuploidy causes meiotic errors.

Authors:  Heather Hall; Patricia Hunt; Terry Hassold
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  2006-05-02       Impact factor: 5.578

4.  Recombination in men with Klinefelter syndrome.

Authors:  Joanna Gonsalves; Paul J Turek; Peter N Schlegel; Carin V Hopps; Jingly Fung Weier; Renee A Reijo Pera
Journal:  Reproduction       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 3.906

5.  Sex chromosomes and reproductive anatomy of some intersexual marsupials.

Authors:  G B Sharman; E S Robinson; S M Walton; R J Berger
Journal:  J Reprod Fertil       Date:  1970-02

6.  A wild common shrew (Sorex araneus) with an XXY sex chromosome constitution.

Authors:  J B Searle
Journal:  J Reprod Fertil       Date:  1984-01

7.  Germ cell loss in the XXY male mouse: altered X-chromosome dosage affects prenatal development.

Authors:  P A Hunt; C Worthman; H Levinson; J Stallings; R LeMaire; K Mroz; C Park; M A Handel
Journal:  Mol Reprod Dev       Date:  1998-02       Impact factor: 2.609

8.  An XXY sex chromosome anomaly in the mouse.

Authors:  A Endo; T Watanabe; T Fujita
Journal:  Genome       Date:  1991-02       Impact factor: 2.166

9.  Sex-chromosome aberrations in wood lemmings (Myopus schisticolor).

Authors:  A Gropp; H Winking; F Frank; G Noack; K Fredga
Journal:  Cytogenet Cell Genet       Date:  1976

10.  Standard karyotype of the mouse, Mus musculus.

Authors: 
Journal:  J Hered       Date:  1972 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 2.645

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