Distributions of gene expression are similar between the X chromosome and autosomes in human, except for reproduction-related X-linked genes not expressed in somatic tissues. (a) Expression distributions are similar for X-linked (red) and autosomal genes (blue) in human brain based on RNA-seq data (P = 0.71, by Kolmogorov-Smirnov test). Left, frequency of genes with 0 FPKM; center, histograms of X-linked and autosomal expression distributions; right, cumulative frequencies for genes with >0 FPKM. A theoretical curve (dotted red line) generated by doubling X-linked expression does not result in equal X-linked and autosomal distributions (P = 1 × 10−12, by Kolmogorov-Smirnov test). (b) Box plots of expression of genes with >0 FPKM are similar from each human chromosome in brain. (c) Left, the frequency of genes with 0 FPKM is significantly higher on the X chromosome than each autosome except for chr. 21 in 41 lymphoblastoid cell lines (P < 0.05, by Fisher’s exact test). Right, histograms of expression distribution for genes with >0 FPKM on each human chromosome. (d) X:A median expression ratios increase depending on FPKM cutoffs (>0, ≥0.1, ≥0.5, ≥1 and ≥2). Ratios calculated for individual lymphoblastoid cell lines (17 female, orange and 24 male, green) reveal variability between lines but no differences between males and females (P > 0.05, by Student’s t-test). (e) X:A median expression ratios calculated after separately rank-ordering X-linked and autosomal genes with >0 FPKM by dividing them into 16 bins based on expression. Bins 1–5 contain genes with <1 FPKM (shadowed). (f) Pairwise comparison of the distribution of gene expression in the testis versus liver. Histograms of expression distribution for the subsets of X-linked (X) and autosomal (A) genes expressed in testis (>0 FPKM) but not expressed (0 FPKM) in liver.