Stowers Institute researchers identified the precise fusion point of a chromosome variant that may contribute to infertility ...
Men losing Y chromosomes as they age may face a higher risk of heart disease, cancer, and reduced life expectancy. Here’s ...
By late middle age, as many as four in ten men have quietly lost the Y chromosome in some blood cells. Scientists are now ...
New techniques to detect Y chromosome genes show frequent loss of the Y in tissues of older men. The increase with age is clear: 40% of 60-year-old men show loss of Y, but 57% of 90-year-olds.

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Studies show aging men often lose the Y chromosome in some cells, a change now linked to heart disease, cancer, and shorter ...
Men tend to lose the Y chromosome from some of their cells as they age — a process once thought to be harmless because the Y ...
Did you know men can lose their Y chromosome as they age An expert explains how this genetic glitch impacts your heart increases disease risk and the lifestyle changes that can slow it down ...
New @hopkinskimmel research finds extra copies of chromosome 1q may drive the earliest stages of pancreatic cancer. › ...
As men age, many quietly lose the Y chromosome in some cells, and scientists now link this hidden change to heart disease, cancer and even shorter lifespans.
Men who lose the Y chromosome in blood cells face higher heart disease risks, independent of smoking, obesity, or diabetes.
Sex chromosomes are unusually labile systems, with frequent shifts between male and female heterogamety and with a large variety in the precise number and types of chromosomes. The lability is further ...