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Demonstration of viability and fertility and development of a molecular tool to identify YY supermales in a fish with both genotypic and environmental sex determination

The pejerrey possesses a genotypic sex determination system driven by the amhy gene and yet shows marked temperature‐dependent sex determination. Sex‐reversed XY females have been found in a naturally breeding population established in Lake Kasumigaura, Japan. These females could mate with normal XY...

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Autores principales: Hattori, Ricardo Shohei, Tashiro, Seiya, Zhang, Yan, Kakuta, Naoya, Yokota, Masashi, Strüssmann, Carlos Augusto, Yamamoto, Yoji
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6106197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30151167
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4148
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author Hattori, Ricardo Shohei
Tashiro, Seiya
Zhang, Yan
Kakuta, Naoya
Yokota, Masashi
Strüssmann, Carlos Augusto
Yamamoto, Yoji
author_facet Hattori, Ricardo Shohei
Tashiro, Seiya
Zhang, Yan
Kakuta, Naoya
Yokota, Masashi
Strüssmann, Carlos Augusto
Yamamoto, Yoji
author_sort Hattori, Ricardo Shohei
collection PubMed
description The pejerrey possesses a genotypic sex determination system driven by the amhy gene and yet shows marked temperature‐dependent sex determination. Sex‐reversed XY females have been found in a naturally breeding population established in Lake Kasumigaura, Japan. These females could mate with normal XY males and generate YY “supermale” individuals that, if viable and fertile, would sire only genotypic male offspring. This study was conducted to verify the viability, gender, and fertility of YY pejerrey and to develop a molecular method for their identification. Production of YY fish was attempted by crossing a thermally sex‐reversed XY female and an XY male, and rearing the progeny until sexual maturation. To identify the presumable YY individuals, we first conducted a PCR analysis using amhy‐specific primers to screen only amhy‐positive (XY and YY) fish. This screening showed that 60.6% of the progeny was amhy‐positive, which suggested the presence of YY fish. We then conducted a second screening by qPCR in order to identify the individuals with two amhy copies in their genome. This screening revealed 13 individuals, all males, with values twice higher than the other 30 amhy‐positive fishes, suggesting they have a YY complement. This assumption as well as the viability, fertility, and “supermale” nature of these individuals was confirmed in progeny tests with XX females that yielded 100% amhy‐positive offspring. These results demonstrate that qPCR can obviate progeny test as a means to identify the genotypic sex and therefore may be useful for the survey of all three possible genotypes in wild populations.
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spelling pubmed-61061972018-08-27 Demonstration of viability and fertility and development of a molecular tool to identify YY supermales in a fish with both genotypic and environmental sex determination Hattori, Ricardo Shohei Tashiro, Seiya Zhang, Yan Kakuta, Naoya Yokota, Masashi Strüssmann, Carlos Augusto Yamamoto, Yoji Ecol Evol Original Research The pejerrey possesses a genotypic sex determination system driven by the amhy gene and yet shows marked temperature‐dependent sex determination. Sex‐reversed XY females have been found in a naturally breeding population established in Lake Kasumigaura, Japan. These females could mate with normal XY males and generate YY “supermale” individuals that, if viable and fertile, would sire only genotypic male offspring. This study was conducted to verify the viability, gender, and fertility of YY pejerrey and to develop a molecular method for their identification. Production of YY fish was attempted by crossing a thermally sex‐reversed XY female and an XY male, and rearing the progeny until sexual maturation. To identify the presumable YY individuals, we first conducted a PCR analysis using amhy‐specific primers to screen only amhy‐positive (XY and YY) fish. This screening showed that 60.6% of the progeny was amhy‐positive, which suggested the presence of YY fish. We then conducted a second screening by qPCR in order to identify the individuals with two amhy copies in their genome. This screening revealed 13 individuals, all males, with values twice higher than the other 30 amhy‐positive fishes, suggesting they have a YY complement. This assumption as well as the viability, fertility, and “supermale” nature of these individuals was confirmed in progeny tests with XX females that yielded 100% amhy‐positive offspring. These results demonstrate that qPCR can obviate progeny test as a means to identify the genotypic sex and therefore may be useful for the survey of all three possible genotypes in wild populations. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6106197/ /pubmed/30151167 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4148 Text en © 2018 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Hattori, Ricardo Shohei
Tashiro, Seiya
Zhang, Yan
Kakuta, Naoya
Yokota, Masashi
Strüssmann, Carlos Augusto
Yamamoto, Yoji
Demonstration of viability and fertility and development of a molecular tool to identify YY supermales in a fish with both genotypic and environmental sex determination
title Demonstration of viability and fertility and development of a molecular tool to identify YY supermales in a fish with both genotypic and environmental sex determination
title_full Demonstration of viability and fertility and development of a molecular tool to identify YY supermales in a fish with both genotypic and environmental sex determination
title_fullStr Demonstration of viability and fertility and development of a molecular tool to identify YY supermales in a fish with both genotypic and environmental sex determination
title_full_unstemmed Demonstration of viability and fertility and development of a molecular tool to identify YY supermales in a fish with both genotypic and environmental sex determination
title_short Demonstration of viability and fertility and development of a molecular tool to identify YY supermales in a fish with both genotypic and environmental sex determination
title_sort demonstration of viability and fertility and development of a molecular tool to identify yy supermales in a fish with both genotypic and environmental sex determination
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6106197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30151167
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4148
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