Pseudoautosomal gene SHOX exhibits sex-biased random monoallelic expression and contributes to sex difference in height

Author:

Hattori AtsushiORCID,Seki AtsuhitoORCID,Inaba NaotoORCID,Nakabayashi KazuhikoORCID,Takeda Kazue,Tatsusmi Kuniko,Naiki Yasuhiro,Nakamura Akie,Ishiwata KeisukeORCID,Matsumoto KenjiORCID,Nasu Michiyo,Okamura KohjiORCID,Michigami ToshimiORCID,Katoh-Fukui YukoORCID,Umezawa AkihiroORCID,Ogata TsutomuORCID,Kagami MasayoORCID,Fukami MakiORCID

Abstract

AbstractAdult men are, on average, ∼13 cm taller than adult women. Although previous studies have suggested a significant contribution of sex chromosomal genes to sexual dimorphism in height, all attempts to identify a male-specific growth gene have failed. In the present study, we analyzed transcripts from cartilage tissues, and found that the expression of SHOX, a growth-promoting gene in the pseudoautosomal region on the X and Y chromosomes, was lower in females than in males. DNA methylation analyses showed that SHOX has some characteristics of genes subjected to X chromosome inactivation (XCI). These findings indicate that sex difference in human height is mainly ascribed to incomplete spreading of XCI on a pseudoautosomal gene. More importantly, RT-PCR of fibroblast clones revealed XCI-independent random clonal monoallelic expression of SHOX. We presume that during eutherian evolution, SHOX translocated from an autosome to the proto-sex chromosome without losing the epigenetic memory of random clonal monoallelic expression and subsequently underwent partial XCI. This study provides a novel model of epigenetic gene regulation leading to phenotypic diversity in humans.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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