Available online at www.scholarsresearchlibrary.com Scholars Research Library Annals of Biological Research, 2012, 3 (1):651-659 (http://scholarsresearchlibrary.com/archive.html) ISSN 0976-1233 CODEN (USA): ABRNBW 651 Scholars Research Library How can a person with two X chromosomes develop into a man? Esmaeilzadeh Mahdi and Kazemzadeh Fariba Department of Basic Sciences, Esfarayen Branch, Islamic Azad University, Esfarayen, Iran ______________________________________________________________________________ ABSTRACT A gene has now been discovered that, when mutated, turns girls into boys. The finding advances, but also complicates, our understanding of how sex is determined by our genes. In people, almost all men carry two different sex chromosomes (XY) and women are XX. But there are some (extremely rare) exceptions to this rule. It is possible to have XX men, for example. This female- to-male sex reversal almost always happens when a certain gene called SRY, usually carried on the Y chromosome, accidentally ends up on the X chromosome inherited from the father. Other genes have been found to muddle up sexual identity, making the resulting child neither fully male nor fully female. But in most cases of anatomically complete XX men — who have functional testes, but without a Y are infertile — SRY is involved. For this reason, it has long been called the gene that defines 'maleness'. But now researchers have found another gene that is equally important to the process. It seems that sex is determined in humans by a cascade of genes. At a crucial junction in this process lies a gene called SOX9, which in males is switched on by SRY, causing testis development. In females, the researchers now suggest, SOX9 might be typically switched off by RSPO1, which, via other genes in the cascade, leads to the development of ovaries. In the brothers, it seems the mutated RSPO1 gene could not fulfil its switching-off role, leaving SOX9 on and leading to male development. Keyword: Sex Determination, Mammals, SRY, SOX9, WANT4, FoxL2, DAX1, RSPO1. ______________________________________________________________________________ INTRODUCTION The differences between males and females are a source of enduring fascination. This is hardly surprising, given the mysteries surrounding these differences and their profound effect on our daily lives. In 1947, Alfred Jost demonstrated that if XX and XY rabbit fetuses were castrated in utero before sexual differentiation, they went on to develop ducts and external genitalia of the female pattern. Therefore, development of femaleness represents the "default" state and is independent of gonadal hormones (1). This essential piece of work demonstrated that the