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Polymorphism for a 1.6-Mb deletion of the human Y chromosome persists through balance between recurrent mutation and haploid selection

  • Sjoerd Repping
  • , Helen Skaletsky
  • , Laura Brown
  • , Saskia K.M. Van Daalen
  • , Cindy M. Korver
  • , Tatyana Pyntikova
  • , Tomoko Kuroda-Kawaguchi
  • , Jan W.A. De Vries
  • , Robert D. Oates
  • , Sherman Silber
  • , Fulco Van der Veen
  • , David C. Page*
  • , Steve Rozen
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  • Academic Medical Center
  • Tokyo Dental College
  • Boston University
  • St Luke Hospital Kansas City

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

393 Scopus citations

Abstract

Many human Y-chromosomal deletions are thought to severely impair reproductive fitness, which precludes their transmission to the next generation and thus ensures their rarity in the population. Here we report a 1.6-Mb deletion that persists over generations and is sufficiently common to be considered a polymorphism. We hypothesized that this deletion might affect spermatogenesis because it removes almost half of the Y chromosome's AZFc region, a gene-rich segment that is critical for sperm production. An association study established that this deletion, called gr/gr, is a significant risk factor for spermatogenic failure. The gr/gr deletion has far lower penetrance with respect to spermatogenic failure than previously characterized Y-chromosomal deletions; it is often transmitted from father to son. By studying the distribution of gr/gr-deleted chromosomes across the branches of the Y chromosome's genealogical tree, we determined that this deletion arose independently at least 14 times in human history. We suggest that the existence of this deletion as a polymorphism reflects a balance between haploid selection, which culls gr/gr-deleted Y chromosomes from the population, and homologous recombination, which continues to generate new gr/gr deletions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)247-251
Number of pages5
JournalNature Genetics
Volume35
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 11 2003
Externally publishedYes

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