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Hermann Henking

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German biologist who discovered the X chromosome

Hermann Paul August Otto Henking (16 June 1858 – 28 April 1942) was a German cytologist who discovered the X chromosome in 1890 or 1891. The work was the result of a study in Leipzig of the testicles of the firebug (Pyrrhocoris apterus), during which Henking noticed that one chromosome did not take part in meiosis. He named this the X element because its strange behaviour made him unsure whether it was genuinely a chromosome. It was later named the X chromosome after American cytologist Clarence Erwin McClung established that it was not only a genuine chromosome but a sex-determining one, though McClung incorrectly guessed that it was the male-determining sex chromosome.

References

  1. James Wynbrandt, Mark D. Ludman, The Encyclopedia of Genetic Disorders and Birth Defects, page 395, Infobase Publishing, 2009 ISBN 1438120958.
  2. James Schwartz, In Pursuit of the Gene: From Darwin to DNA, pages 155–158, Harvard University Press, 2009 ISBN 0674034910
  3. David Bainbridge, The X in Sex: How the X Chromosome Controls Our Lives, pages 3–5, Harvard University Press, 2003 ISBN 0674016211.


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