The Y chromosome in human men is shrinking so quickly, it could disappear altogether 鈥 though that will likely take some 4.5 million years. But the good news is that human genetics could find a solution around the problem.
The Y chromosome is the sex-determining chromosome in humans and many other animal species. It carries the 鈥渕aster switch鈥 gene, SRY, that determines whether an embryo will develop as female, with two X chromosomes, or male, with one X and one Y chromosome.
Darren Griffin, a professor of genetics at the University of Kent, explains there was once was a time when a man鈥檚 X chromosome was the same length as his Y, but that鈥檚 been changing over the last 200 million years or so.
Women鈥檚 X chromosomes haven鈥檛 changed much in the last 200 million years or so, men鈥檚 Y chromosome has been shrinking, and losing dozens of the genes it once shared with women.
So do all these changes mean that men are endangered?
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a question I get asked an awful lot, and the answer is absolutely not,鈥 Griffin told CTV鈥檚 Your Morning Wednesday. 鈥溾 Males are not going away.鈥
Griffin said it鈥檚 possible that the SRY gene could simply move its sex-determining mechanism to a different chromosome. That鈥檚 what has happened with Japanese spiny rats and mole voles, who lost their Y chromosomes entirely, says Griffin.
But, even if that happens to humans, it likely won鈥檛 be for several million more years.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not awfully worried. I think we鈥檝e got an awful lot of things to be worried about in the meantime,鈥 he said.