New research manages to soothe mens fears about becoming surplus to requirements.
Gentlemen, stand at ease. Reports of the demise of the male Y chromosome have been greatly exaggerated, according to scientists who believe men are not in danger of their predicted extinction.
Two independent studies of the diminutive Y chromosome, which is inherited solely down the male line, have failed to find evidence to support the widely held theory that its evolutionary days and those of its owners are numbered.
A detailed genetic analysis of the Y chromosomes of a wide range of mammalian species, including humans, shows that far from continuing to wither away unremittingly, it has remained remarkably stable for at least the past 25 million years.
The research also found that the few remaining genes on the Y chromosome include some that perform vital regulatory control of other genes that are active throughout a mans body making each of his cells distinctly and subtly different from those of a woman. This would suggest that medical treatments should in future be tailored more towards a patients gender and that doctors may have more reason to treat men and women differently according to their sex, said Professor David Page, director of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts.