| Literature DB >> 26385780 |
Ajay Pradhan1, Per-Erik Olsson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mating behavior differ between sexes and involves gonadal hormones and possibly sexually dimorphic gene expression in the brain. Sex steroids and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) have been shown to regulate mammalian sexual behavior. The present study was aimed at determining whether exposure to sex steroids and prostaglandins could alter zebrafish sexual mating behavior.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26385780 PMCID: PMC4575480 DOI: 10.1186/s12993-015-0068-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Brain Funct ISSN: 1744-9081 Impact factor: 3.759
Figure 1Behavioral change and spawning. Male and female zebrafish were exposed to 25 nM of sex steroids (E2 and 11-KT) and 20, 50 and 100 nM of prostaglandins (PGE2 and BW245C) separately for 8 days then kept together to analyze any change in behavior. Kruskal–Wallis test followed by Dunn’s post-test was performed to determine any change in normal behavior between the control and treated groups (*p < 0.05). Mann–Whitney U-test was used to determine statistically significant differences between control and KT exposed females paired to untreated females (*p < 0.05). The steroid hormones experiments were performed with 24 fish while 12 fish were used for prostaglandin exposures.
Figure 2qRT-PCR array. Male and female zebrafish (n = 4 for each sex) were exposed separately to 25 nM E2 for 24 h and the brain tissue was isolated and dissected into three regions. RNA was isolated from individual samples followed by qRT-PCR analysis of 32 genes. a Tableau software was used to generate the heat map. The scale bar represents magnitude of expression with male sample from forebrain set to 1 and highest expression fixed to 4. b Venn-diagram showing the sexually dimorphic genes with higher expression of 8 genes in females while only 5 genes were male biased. 19 genes did not show sexually dimorphic expression patterns. c Venn-diagram showing E2 mediated dimorphic gene expression with six genes being regulated in males only, six genes being regulated in both sexes and one gene being regulated in females only.
Genes showing significant dimorphic expression in the three brain regions
| Genes | Male/femalea biased | p-value* | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Forebrain | Midbrain | Hindbrain | ||
|
| Male | ns | 0.0087 | ns |
|
| Female | ns | ns | 0.0090 |
|
| Male | 0.0017 | 0.0004 | 0.0256 |
|
| Female | 0.027 | ns | ns |
|
| Female | 0.0166 | ns | ns |
|
| Male | ns | ns | 0.0211 |
|
| Male | ns | ns | 0.0185 |
|
| Male | <0.0001 | ns | ns |
|
| Female | 0.0045 | ns | ns |
|
| Female | ns | ns | 0.0007 |
|
| Female | 0.0235 | ns | ns |
|
| Female | 0.0007 | ns | ns |
|
| Female | 0.0121 | ns | ns |
ns not significant.
aFemales showed higher expression of eight genes and males showed higher expression of five genes.
* Student’s t test was performed to determine statistical significance.
Figure 3Principal component analysis. The PCA analysis was based on the gene expression patterns in male (M) and female (F) zebrafish brain regions with and without E2 exposure. Gene expression in the forebrain, midbrain and hindbrain regions were analyzed. a Score plot showing the distribution of the brain regions in control and E2 exposed zebrafish based on gene expression. The ellipse shows Hotellings T2 (0.05). b PCA loading plot showing the distribution of the measured gene expression levels.