Environmental Effects on Fish Sex Determination and Differentiation

被引:214
作者
Baroiller, J. F. [1 ]
D'Cotta, H. [1 ]
Saillant, E. [2 ]
机构
[1] CIRAD, Upr20, Dept Persyst, FR-34398 Montpellier, France
[2] Univ So Mississippi, Dept Coastal Sci, Gulf Coast Res Lab, Ocean Springs, MS USA
关键词
ESD; Fish; Genes; Gonads; Growth rate; GSD; Hypoxia; Sex determination/differentiation; Temperature; PEJERREY ODONTESTHES-BONARIENSIS; TILAPIA OREOCHROMIS-NILOTICUS; AROMATASE GENE-EXPRESSION; ANTI-MULLERIAN HORMONE; HIGH WATER TEMPERATURE; GERM-CELL LOSS; DICENTRARCHUS-LABRAX; NILE TILAPIA; JAPANESE FLOUNDER; DIMORPHIC EXPRESSION;
D O I
10.1159/000223077
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Environmental factors affect the sex ratio of many gonochoristic fish species. They can either determine sex or influence sex differentiation. Temperature is the most common environmental cue affecting sex but density, pH and hypoxia have also been shown to influence the sex ratio of fish species from very divergent orders. Differential growth or developmental rate is suggested to influence sex differentiation in sea bass. Studies in most fish species used domestic strains reared under controlled conditions. In tilapia and sea bass, domestic stocks and field-collected populations showed similar patterns of thermosensitivity under controlled conditions. Genetic variability of thermosensitivity is seen between populations but also between families within the same population. Furthermore, in the Nile tilapia progeny testing of wild male breeders has strongly suggested the existence of XX males in 2 different natural populations. Tilapia and Atlantic silverside studies have shown that temperature sensitivity is a heritable trait which can respond to directional (tilapia) or frequency dependent selection. In tilapia, transitional forms within a genetic sex determination (GSD) and exist. Temperature regulates the expression of the ovarian-aromatase cyp19a1 which is consistently inhibited in temperature masculinized gonads. Foxl2 is suppressed before cyp19a1. Recent in vitro studies have shown that foxl2 activates cyp19a1, suggesting that temperature acts directly on foxl2 or further upstream. Dmrt1 up-regulation is correlated with temperature-induced male phenotypes. Temperature through apoptosis or germ cell proliferation could be a critical threshold for male or female sex differentiation. Copyright (C) 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel
引用
收藏
页码:118 / 135
页数:18
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