
Audio By Carbonatix
Research suggests that the Y chromosome -which plays a critical role in sexual reproduction of men - may disappear in less than five million years, leading to a future without males, who carries two different kinds of sex chromosomes (XY).
According to a publication by scientists from the University of Kent last week, although the Y chromosome contains the “master switch” gene SRY, which can determine the gender of the embryo, it carries very few other genes and is the only chromosome not necessary for life.
Women, who typically have two of the same kind of sex chromosome (XX), manage just fine without the chromosome.
It said when the very first mammal emerged, the Y chromosome had the same size and the gene combination as the X chromosome. However, since the Y chromosome has a fundamental flaw, it can only present as a single copy passed from fathers to their sons.
Therefore, genes carried by the Y chromosome cannot undergo genetic recombination, the “shuffling” of genes that occurs in each generation which helps to eliminate damaging gene mutations, said scientists.
It said if the Y chromosome keeps degenerating at the same rate, it will disappear in 4.6 million years.
Jenny Graves from La Trobe University in Australia pointed out in a 2016 paper that Japanese spiny rats and mole voles have lost their Y chromosomes entirely, claiming that the loss of genes would lead to fertility issues.
Luckily, assisted reproduction techniques can make up for the lack of Y chromosome, meaning that genetic engineering may soon be able to replace the gene function of the Y chromosome, allowing same-sex female couples or infertile men to conceive.
“Although this is an interesting and hotly debated area of genetic research, there is little need to worry. We don’t even know whether the Y chromosome will disappear at all,” scientists said at the end of the article.
Latest Stories
-
High Court affirms ICAG’s sole authority to regulate accountancy profession
29 minutes -
A restored banking license difficult to resume operation; once collapsed ends its story
58 minutes -
Kojo Mensa-Wilmot – a Molecular Biologist and Parasitologist
1 hour -
THE LAW 101: The burden of proof and the presumption of innocence – Lessons from London
1 hour -
UN says it will evacuate sailors stranded in Strait of Hormuz, as Rubio warns against tolls
1 hour -
Police arrest 186 suspects in major crackdown on human trafficking, organised crime in Ashanti Region
1 hour -
Nations do not industrialise by accident—they industrialise by procurement design
1 hour -
Nandom Community Bank records GH₵81.8m asset growth as stakeholders rally for urgent recapitalisation
2 hours -
GIZ, Guinness Ghana sign MoU to boost sorghum output, target 30,000 farmers, 150 jobs in northern Ghana
2 hours -
Partey, Inaki Williams start as Queiroz makes four changes for England clash
2 hours -
LUV FACT-CHECK: NPP did not demand retraction from Kennedy Agyapong over Afari Hospital criticism
2 hours -
80 children, 1 room: Bugbelle gets room for hope
2 hours -
VRA warns public over recruitment scam, says it does not charge fees
2 hours -
Accra dons national colours as fans rally behind Black Stars ahead of England clash
3 hours -
UMB rallies support for Black Stars with Kumasi float as part of 2026 FIFA World Cup campaign
3 hours