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Maternal iron deficiency causes male-to-female sex reversal in mouse embryos

Naoki Okashita, Ryo Maeda, Shunsuke Kuroki, Kyona Sasaki, Yoko Uno, Peter Koopman and Makoto Tachibana ()
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Naoki Okashita: Osaka University
Ryo Maeda: Osaka University
Shunsuke Kuroki: Osaka University
Kyona Sasaki: Osaka University
Yoko Uno: Osaka University
Peter Koopman: University of Queensland
Makoto Tachibana: Osaka University

Nature, 2025, vol. 643, issue 8070, 262-270

Abstract: Abstract Ferrous iron (Fe2+) is essential in all eukaryotic cells for various oxidoreductase reactions, including the demethylation of DNA and proteins. Histone demethylation is required for normal epigenetic regulation of the Y-chromosomal sex-determining gene Sry in developing gonads during male sex determination1,2. Here we investigate the potential connection between iron metabolism, histone demethylation and sex determination in mammals. We found that Fe2+-producing pathways are substantially activated in mouse embryonic gonads during the sex-determining period. Chelation of iron in cultured XY gonads reduced the level of KDM3A-mediated H3K9 demethylation of Sry, mostly abolished Sry expression and caused the gonads to express ovarian markers. In vivo, conditional deletion of the gene Tfrc—which is required for iron incorporation—in fetal XY gonadal somatic cells, or acute pharmaceutical suppression of available iron in pregnant mice, resulted in male-to-female gonadal sex reversal in a proportion of offspring, highlighting the pivotal role of iron metabolism in male sex determination. Finally, long-term feeding of pregnant mice with a low-iron diet, when combined with a heterozygous variant of Kdm3a that by itself has no observable effect, suppressed Sry expression and caused male-to-female sex reversal in some of the progeny, revealing a connection between maternal dietary iron and fetal developmental outcomes.

Date: 2025
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09063-2

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