On Mon, Mar 21, 2005 at 02:02:23PM -0700, Monique Y. Mudama wrote: > I thought this article might be of interest to the group. The article is > rather flip, but beneath the surface I think I see some content. > > http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/20/opinion/20dowd.html?ex=1112072400&en=898d3ff11f9b96a1&ei=5070
Ugh... NYT op ed piece on a real science article. This is the sort of thing scientists hate :-) I just read the Nature paper that the article is based on. It's some pretty cool work, although it only talks about things at a very large level and not at a functional level that describes what the genes are actually doing. Many of you probably know that in women, one of the two X chromosomes is inactivated. This paper measures how much that inactivation really occurs by looking at whole chromosome expression of individual genes located on the X chromosome. They find that the inactivation isn't complete, and that 15% of the X chromosome genes aren't inactivated at all, and another 10% are inactivated in some chromosomes but not in others. What's new about this is that we've never known just how many genes on the X chromosome are actually silenced. I was taught that the whole chromosome is silenced, and this was only three years ago. However, some caveats have to be mentioned. #1 is that more genes and more gene expression doesn't necessarily make you more complex. A commonly used worm in biology studies has more chromosomes and more genes than a fruitfly, and there are a number of plants with more genes than you or I. #2 is that there are a number of genes present on the Y chromosome which females simply don't carry at all. I'm not even going to begin to touch the NYT article directly, as it makes my stomache churn. The findings have interesting implications for sexual dimorphisms, and perhaps more importantly differences between individuals. In no way though, does this imply that women are genetically superior to men. I give the NYT article a big "Troll" rating. - David Nusinow -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]