Journal article
The molecular genetics of ovarian differentiation in the avian model
KL Ayers, AH Sinclair, CA Smith
Sexual Development | Published : 2013
DOI: 10.1159/000342358
Abstract
In birds as in mammals, sex is determined at fertilization by the inheritance of sex chromosomes. However, sexual differentiation - development of a male or female phenotype - occurs during embryonic development. Sex differentiation requires the induction of sex-specific developmental pathways in the gonads, resulting in the formation of ovaries or testes. Birds utilize a different sex chromosome system to that of mammals, where females are the heterogametic sex (carrying Z and W chromosomes), while males are homogametic (carrying 2 Z chromosomes). Therefore, while some genes essential for testis and ovarian development are conserved, important differences also exist. Namely, the key mammali..
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Funding Acknowledgements
Research carried out by C.A.S. and K.L.A. was partly conducted within the Poultry CRC, established and supported under the Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centres' program.