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Ontogenic and morphological study of gonadal formation in genetically-modified sex reversal XY(POS) mice

Mammalian sexual fate is determined by the presence or absence of sex determining region of the Y chromosome (Sry) in the “bipotential” gonads. Recent studies have demonstrated that both male and female sexual development are induced by distinct and active genetic pathways. Breeding the Y chromosome...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: UMEMURA, Yuria, MIYAMOTO, Ryosuke, HASHIMOTO, Rie, KINOSHITA, Kyoko, OMOTEHARA, Takuya, NAGAHARA, Daichi, HIRANO, Tetsushi, KUBOTA, Naoto, MINAMI, Kiichi, YANAI, Shogo, MASUDA, Natsumi, YUASA, Hideto, MANTANI, Youhei, MATSUO, Eiko, YOKOYAMA, Toshifumi, KITAGAWA, Hiroshi, HOSHI, Nobuhiko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Japanese Society of Veterinary Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4710714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26194606
http://dx.doi.org/10.1292/jvms.15-0292
Descripción
Sumario:Mammalian sexual fate is determined by the presence or absence of sex determining region of the Y chromosome (Sry) in the “bipotential” gonads. Recent studies have demonstrated that both male and female sexual development are induced by distinct and active genetic pathways. Breeding the Y chromosome from Mus m. domesticus poschiavinus (POS) strains into C57BL/6J (B6J) mice (B6J-XY(POS)) has been shown to induce sex reversal (75%: bilateral ovary, 25%: true hermaphrodites). However, our B6N-XY(POS) mice, which were generated by backcrossing of B6J-XY(POS) on an inbred B6N-XX, develop as males (36%: bilateral testis with fertility as well as bilateral ovary (34%), and the remainder develop as true hermaphrodites. Here, we investigated in detail the expressions of essential sex-related genes and histological features in B6N-XY(POS) mice from the fetal period to adulthood. The onsets of both Sry and SRY-box 9 (Sox9) expressions as determined spatiotemporally by whole-mount immunohistochemistry in the B6N-XY(POS) gonads occurred 2–3 tail somites later than those in B6N-XY(B6) gonads, but earlier than those in B6J-XY(POS), respectively. It is possible that such a small difference in timing of the Sry expression underlies testicular development in our B6N-XY(POS). Our study is the first to histologically show the expression and ectopic localization of a female-related gene in the XY(POS) testes and a male-related gene in the XY(POS) ovaries. The results from these and previous experiments indicate that the interplay between genome variants, epigenetics and developmental gene regulation is crucial for testis development.