Will the human race survive the disappearance of the male Y chromosome?

The decline of the Y chromosome
The end of man?
X and Y
A gradual process
The key gene
Evolutionary genetic loss
More than 11 million years?
Rodents bearing good news
A miraculous adaptation
 DNA duplication
Branching off
Multiple humanities?
The decline of the Y chromosome

The Y chromosome containing the gene that determines male gender in humans and other mammals, is on its way out, studies have established, reports The Conversation.

The end of man?

But would this necessarily mean no more men in the world and the extinction of the human race?

X and Y

Among humans and other mammals, females have two X chromosomes, while males have a single X chromosome and a small Y chromosome.

A gradual process

The good news is that the Y chromosome only present in males could take millions of years to degenerate to the point of non-existence.

Photo: Mubariz Mehdizadeh / Unsplash

The key gene

The Y chromosome contains a master gender gene called "SRY" – or s** region on the Y – and was identified in 1990.

Photo: Sangharsh Lohakare / Unsplash

Evolutionary genetic loss

The human Y chromosome contains only 55 genes, compared to the X chromosome's 900. This means that the Y must have lost over 800 genes over the course of evolution.

More than 11 million years?

Since this mutation occurred at a rate of five per million years, we would appear to have only 11 million years left before the Y chromosome completely disappears.

Rodents bearing good news

The really good news is that Japanese researchers have discovered an alternative mechanism for determining gender among certain rodent species. Their results were published last February in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science .

Photo: Oxana Golubets / Unsplash

A miraculous adaptation

Professor Asato Kuroiwa's team from Hokkaido University found that Japanese spiny rats continued to reproduce despite losing their Y chromosome and the SRY gene.

Photo: ja uppendahl / Unsplash

DNA duplication

"Researchers have identified a tiny DNA duplication near the SOX9 gene, present only in males," says Futura Sciences. This suggests that nature can develop alternatives to the Y chromosome to maintain reproduction!

Photo: digitale.de / Unsplash

Branching off

However, the plurality of gender determination systems could lead to a progressive split in a species, resulting in various sub-species of humans and other mammals.

Photo: Andrik Langfield / Unsplash

Multiple humanities?

If humanity survives extinction, will it be able to branch out into several types? This hypothesis, which remains highly speculative, would be like the era when Homo sapiens separated from Neanderthals.

Photo: Adrian Swancar / Unsplash

More for you