Abstract

It has been proposed, on the basis of widespread phylogenetic conservation, that H-Y antigen is the inducer of primary sex, causing the undifferentiated XY gonad to become a testis in male heterogametic species such as the human and bovine. That proposition has withstood extensive testing in vivo and in vitro. Freemartin gonads are H-Y +, for example, and masculinization of the freemartin gonad has been attributed to soluble H-Y, borne and transmitted in the serum of the bull twin, and bound in ovarian receptors of the female. We have applied monoclonal H-Y antibodies to the identification of gender in embryos of the bovine. Our preliminary results imply presence of H-Y in bovine embryos of the morula and blastocyst stages recovered at about 6–12 days of gestation. Assignment of H-Y phenotype -- positive in males and negative in females -- allows selective implantation of male and female during embryo transfer. Thus in an early study, we correctly identified gender in 6 of 7 calves born healthy at term, after transfer of 8 blastocysts.

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