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Bizarre genetic makeup of the platypus revealed

7 May 2008

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

(Image: Dave Watts/Alamy)

TWO centuries after a dead specimen was deemed so outlandish it had to be a fake, the bizarre genetic make-up of the platypus has been laid bare.

Wesley Warren at Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, led the team that sequenced the platypus genome. As expected, they found an amalgam of reptile and mammalian features, but some surprises, too.

It turns out the gene sequences responsible for determining sex are more like a bird’s than a mammal’s. Though the gene that evolved into the human sex-determining gene is present, that is not its job. So the function…

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