Back to Search Start Over

Conservation and diversity in expression of candidate genes regulating socially-induced female-male sex change in wrasses

Authors :
Melissa S. Lamm
Erin L. Damsteegt
Florence Gléonnec
John Godwin
Neil J. Gemmell
Hui Liu
Jodi T. Thomas
Kiyoshi Soyano
Simon Muncaster
Erica V. Todd
P. Mark Lokman
University of Otago [Dunedin, Nouvelle-Zélande]
James Cook University (JCU)
Nagasaki University
Structure Fédérative de Recherche en Biologie et Santé de Rennes ( Biosit : Biologie - Santé - Innovation Technologique )
North Carolina State University [Raleigh] (NC State)
University of North Carolina System (UNC)
Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Fund [UOO1308]
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [L10703]
National Science Foundation [1257791, 1257761]
Otago School of Medical Science Summer Scholarship
Source :
PeerJ, Vol 7, p e7032 (2019), PeerJ, PeerJ, PeerJ, 2019, 7, ⟨10.7717/peerj.7032⟩
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
PeerJ Inc., 2019.

Abstract

Fishes exhibit remarkably diverse, and plastic, patterns of sexual development, most striking of which is sequential hermaphroditism, where individuals readily reverse sex in adulthood. How this stunning example of phenotypic plasticity is controlled at a genetic level remains poorly understood. Several genes have been implicated in regulating sex change, yet the degree to which a conserved genetic machinery orchestrates this process has not yet been addressed. Using captive and in-the-field social manipulations to initiate sex change, combined with a comparative qPCR approach, we compared expression patterns of four candidate regulatory genes among three species of wrasses (Labridae) - a large and diverse teleost family where female-to-male sex change is pervasive, socially-cued, and likely ancestral. Expression in brain and gonadal tissues were compared among the iconic tropical bluehead wrasse (Thalassoma bifasciatum) and the temperate spotty (Notolabrus celidotus) and kyusen (Parajulus poecilepterus) wrasses. In all three species, cyp19a1a (encoding gonadal aromatase that converts androgens to oestrogens) and amh (encoding anti-müllerian hormone that primarily regulates male germ cell development) were downregulated and upregulated, respectively, at the initiation of gonadal sex change, and may act concurrently to orchestrate ovary-testis transformation. In the brain, our data argue against a role for brain aromatase (cyp19a1b) in initiating behavioural sex change, as its expression trailed behavioural changes. However, we find that isotocin (it, that regulates teleost socio-sexual behaviours) expression correlated with dominant male-specific behaviours in the bluehead wrasse, suggesting it upregulation mediates the rapid behavioural sex change characteristic of blueheads and other tropical wrasses. However, it expression was not sex-biased in temperate spotty and kyusen wrasses, where sex change is more protracted and social groups may be less tightly-structured. Together, these findings suggest that while key components of the molecular machinery controlling gonadal sex change are phylogenetically conserved among wrasses, neural pathways governing behavioural sex change may be more variable.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21678359
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PeerJ
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....98577bdec0bcebf55d7371a74c41db36
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7032⟩