Search

HarvardScience is a publication of the Harvard Office of News and Public Affairs devoted to all matters related to science at the various schools, departments, institutes, and hospitals of Harvard University.
Harvard Science foundations
Na Xu, Bryan Sun, and Jeannie Lee uncovered new steps that take place in female cells to ensure that only one X chromosome prevails.

(Graham Ramsay)

X inactivation seen as contact sport

March 24, 2006

At an early stage in a female embryo's development, one of the two X chromosomes in each of its cells becomes inactivated. In two recent papers, the lab of Jeannie Lee makes important breakthroughs in uncovering how the two X chromosomes decide their fate.

A study in the Jan. 20, 2006 Science shows that the chromosomes literally get together before one of them bows out.

The other, in the March 3, 2006 Molecular Cell, sheds light on the inactivating mechanism, how an RNA called Xist gets switched on in order to envelop the future inactive chromosome.

foundations environments animal, vegetable, + mineral medicine + health culture + society engineering + technology