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SUN-736 Knockout of Membrane Androgen Receptor ZIP9 Results in Reduced Female Fecundity and Abnormal Egg Activation in Zebrafish

Recently, our research group cloned and characterized a putative membrane androgen receptor from teleost ovarian tissue that was found to be homologous with the zinc transporter protein ZIP9 (Slc39a9). To date, ZIP9 is the only zinc transporter that is known to be ligand activated or possess steroid...

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Autores principales: Converse, Aubrey, Thomas, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207506/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1871
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author Converse, Aubrey
Thomas, Peter
author_facet Converse, Aubrey
Thomas, Peter
author_sort Converse, Aubrey
collection PubMed
description Recently, our research group cloned and characterized a putative membrane androgen receptor from teleost ovarian tissue that was found to be homologous with the zinc transporter protein ZIP9 (Slc39a9). To date, ZIP9 is the only zinc transporter that is known to be ligand activated or possess steroid receptor activity. Since the discovery of its androgen receptor activity, ZIP9 has been found to mediate androgen actions in a variety of tissues including teleost ovarian follicle cells, human cancer cell lines, and murine Sertoli cells. However, ZIP9 has not been examined in an in vivo model so the precise physiological functions of this receptor remain unclear. A ZIP9-mutant strain of zebrafish was developed using a CRISPR-Cas9 system in order to examine the role of the protein in teleost reproduction. While ZIP9-mutant males had similar breeding occurrence and fertilization rates to wild-type fish, mutant females exhibited severe reductions in fecundity compared to wild-type fish. ZIP9-mutant females spawn significantly fewer eggs of which a high proportion failed to undergo chorion elevation, a characteristic of normal egg activation. Eggs that showed this failed chorion elevation phenotype had significantly lower fertilization rates and produced larvae that exhibit a high incidence of pericardial/yolk sac edema and reduced growth compared to larvae hatched from wild-type eggs. However, no differences were observed in the proportions of oocytes at later stages of development between ZIP9-mutant and wild-type fish, suggesting the observed phenotypes are not related to abnormal oogenesis. We observed that mature wild-type eggs have numerous cortically located vesicles that are autofluorescent under ultraviolet light and decrease in number when the eggs undergo activation, suggesting they undergo exocytosis during the cortical reaction. While zinc is known to be stored in vesicles that undergo exocytosis in mammalian eggs, the role of zinc in teleost egg activation is currently unknown. In eggs from wild-type fish, we observed an increase in extracellular zinc levels upon egg activation and treatment with a zinc ionophore (zinc pyrithione) significantly reduced the number of eggs that undergo normal chorion elevation when activated. This suggests a role for zinc in zebrafish egg activation similar to that observed in mammals. Of interest, ZIP9-mutant eggs that did not undergo chorion elevation had significantly smaller vesicles than those found in wild-type fish eggs. This abnormal vesicle morphology and failure to undergo chorion elevation suggest a role of ZIP9 in egg activation. Additional insight into the role of zinc in zebrafish egg activation and the mechanism by which ZIP9 disruption leads to abnormal cortical vesicles and egg activation will help determine if ZIP9 plays a role in zinc transport and flux in zebrafish eggs during activation.
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spelling pubmed-72075062020-05-13 SUN-736 Knockout of Membrane Androgen Receptor ZIP9 Results in Reduced Female Fecundity and Abnormal Egg Activation in Zebrafish Converse, Aubrey Thomas, Peter J Endocr Soc Steroid Hormones and Receptors Recently, our research group cloned and characterized a putative membrane androgen receptor from teleost ovarian tissue that was found to be homologous with the zinc transporter protein ZIP9 (Slc39a9). To date, ZIP9 is the only zinc transporter that is known to be ligand activated or possess steroid receptor activity. Since the discovery of its androgen receptor activity, ZIP9 has been found to mediate androgen actions in a variety of tissues including teleost ovarian follicle cells, human cancer cell lines, and murine Sertoli cells. However, ZIP9 has not been examined in an in vivo model so the precise physiological functions of this receptor remain unclear. A ZIP9-mutant strain of zebrafish was developed using a CRISPR-Cas9 system in order to examine the role of the protein in teleost reproduction. While ZIP9-mutant males had similar breeding occurrence and fertilization rates to wild-type fish, mutant females exhibited severe reductions in fecundity compared to wild-type fish. ZIP9-mutant females spawn significantly fewer eggs of which a high proportion failed to undergo chorion elevation, a characteristic of normal egg activation. Eggs that showed this failed chorion elevation phenotype had significantly lower fertilization rates and produced larvae that exhibit a high incidence of pericardial/yolk sac edema and reduced growth compared to larvae hatched from wild-type eggs. However, no differences were observed in the proportions of oocytes at later stages of development between ZIP9-mutant and wild-type fish, suggesting the observed phenotypes are not related to abnormal oogenesis. We observed that mature wild-type eggs have numerous cortically located vesicles that are autofluorescent under ultraviolet light and decrease in number when the eggs undergo activation, suggesting they undergo exocytosis during the cortical reaction. While zinc is known to be stored in vesicles that undergo exocytosis in mammalian eggs, the role of zinc in teleost egg activation is currently unknown. In eggs from wild-type fish, we observed an increase in extracellular zinc levels upon egg activation and treatment with a zinc ionophore (zinc pyrithione) significantly reduced the number of eggs that undergo normal chorion elevation when activated. This suggests a role for zinc in zebrafish egg activation similar to that observed in mammals. Of interest, ZIP9-mutant eggs that did not undergo chorion elevation had significantly smaller vesicles than those found in wild-type fish eggs. This abnormal vesicle morphology and failure to undergo chorion elevation suggest a role of ZIP9 in egg activation. Additional insight into the role of zinc in zebrafish egg activation and the mechanism by which ZIP9 disruption leads to abnormal cortical vesicles and egg activation will help determine if ZIP9 plays a role in zinc transport and flux in zebrafish eggs during activation. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7207506/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1871 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Steroid Hormones and Receptors
Converse, Aubrey
Thomas, Peter
SUN-736 Knockout of Membrane Androgen Receptor ZIP9 Results in Reduced Female Fecundity and Abnormal Egg Activation in Zebrafish
title SUN-736 Knockout of Membrane Androgen Receptor ZIP9 Results in Reduced Female Fecundity and Abnormal Egg Activation in Zebrafish
title_full SUN-736 Knockout of Membrane Androgen Receptor ZIP9 Results in Reduced Female Fecundity and Abnormal Egg Activation in Zebrafish
title_fullStr SUN-736 Knockout of Membrane Androgen Receptor ZIP9 Results in Reduced Female Fecundity and Abnormal Egg Activation in Zebrafish
title_full_unstemmed SUN-736 Knockout of Membrane Androgen Receptor ZIP9 Results in Reduced Female Fecundity and Abnormal Egg Activation in Zebrafish
title_short SUN-736 Knockout of Membrane Androgen Receptor ZIP9 Results in Reduced Female Fecundity and Abnormal Egg Activation in Zebrafish
title_sort sun-736 knockout of membrane androgen receptor zip9 results in reduced female fecundity and abnormal egg activation in zebrafish
topic Steroid Hormones and Receptors
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207506/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1871
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