1. Unveiling potential sex-determining genes and sex-specific markers in autotetraploid Carassius auratus.
- Author
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Zhang K, Huang X, Wang C, Xu X, Xu X, Dong X, Xiao Q, Bai J, Zhou Y, Liu Z, Deng X, Tang Y, Li S, Hu E, Peng W, Xiong L, Qin Q, and Liu S
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Male, INDEL Mutation, Genetic Markers, Fish Proteins genetics, Whole Genome Sequencing methods, Goldfish genetics, Sex Determination Processes genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Tetraploidy
- Abstract
Autotetraploid Carassius auratus is a stable hereditary autotetraploid fish resulting from the hybridization of Carassius auratus red var. (RCC, ♀) × Megalobrama amblycephala (BSB, ♂), containing four sets of RCC chromosomes. However, the molecular mechanism underlying the determination of sex in this species remains largely unknown. Currently, there lacks a full understanding of the molecular mechanisms governing sex determination and specific molecular markers to differentiate sex in this species. In this study, 25,801,677 SNPs (Single-nucleotide polymorphism) and 6,210,306 Indels (insertion-deletion) were obtained from whole-genome resequencing of 100 individuals (including 50 female and 50 male). Further identification confirmed the candidate chromosomes as Chr46B, with the sex-determining region located at Chr46B: 22,500,000-22,800,000 bp. Based on the male-specific insertion (26 bp) within the candidate sex-determining region, a pair of sex-specific molecular markers has been identified. In addition, based on the screening of candidate sex-determining region genes and RT-qPCR validation analysis, ADAM10, AQP9 and tc1a were identified as candidate sex-determining genes. These findings provide a robust foundation for investigating sex determination mechanisms in fish, the evolution of sex chromosomes, and the development of monosex populations., (© 2024. Science China Press.)
- Published
- 2024
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