| Literature DB >> 28583077 |
Mercedes Blázquez1,2, Paula Medina3,4,5, Berta Crespo3,6, Ana Gómez3, Silvia Zanuy7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spermatogenesis is a complex process characterized by the activation and/or repression of a number of genes in a spatio-temporal manner. Pubertal development in males starts with the onset of the first spermatogenesis and implies the division of primary spermatogonia and their subsequent entry into meiosis. This study is aimed at the characterization of genes involved in the onset of puberty in European sea bass, and constitutes the first transcriptomic approach focused on meiosis in this species.Entities:
Keywords: Cell cycle; Meiosis; Retinoic acid; Spermatogenesis; Teleosts
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28583077 PMCID: PMC5460432 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-017-3823-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Photomicrographs of European sea bass testis during early stages of pubertal development. a Sexually immature testis in stage I, was characterized by the presence of type A spermatogonia (arrowheads) located within the seminiferous lobules (b) Early recrudescent testis in stage II, characterized by the presence of type A spermatogonia (arrowheads), abundant cysts of type B spermatogonia (white asterisks), and scarce cysts of type I spermatocytes (encircled black asterisk)
Fig. 2Box-and-whisker plots of 11 ketotestosterone (11KT) plasma levels in European sea bass males during early stages of puberty. 11KT levels were measured at two different stages of pubertal development: stage I, corresponding to sexually immature testes and stage II corresponding to early recrudescent testes. Box represents uper and lower quartiles and maximum and minimum observed values are represented by whiskers. Horizontal line represents the median value (0.99 ng/ml for stage I and 2.90 ng/ml for stage II). The asterisk denotes statistical differences between both groups after a student t-test (p < 0.05); n = 20 in each experimental group
Fig. 3Hierarchical heat map of European sea bass annotated ESTs differentially expressed during early stages of puberty. The individual genes are pictured horizontally showing their relative expression values across all replicates of the different stages of pubertal development (tree replicates per stage) that are represented in each column. The colour scheme is calibrated to the log2 expression values with red representing higher transcript abundance and green lower transcript abundance. The heatmap displays only DEGs (corresponding to 152 annotated genes) with significantly different expression values (p < 0.01) between stage I and stage II and a log2 fold change value greater than two (Pearson correlation). The scale bar shows Z-score values
Gene ontology analysis of annotated transcripts significantly affected during the onset of puberty in European sea bass testis (Fisher’s exact test with multiple corrections for FDR)
| GO-term | FDR |
| Sample frequency ( | Array frequency ( | Gene names |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biological process | |||||
|
| 2.0E-7 | 2.3E-10 | 36 (25.5%) | 594 (7.7%) |
|
|
| 3.8E-2 | 2.2E-3 | 11 (7.8%) | 212 (2.8%) |
|
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| 2.1E-6 | 2.1E-08 | 12 (8.5%) | 70 (1.0%) |
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| 8.0E-3 | 6.0E-5 | 20 (14.2%) | 401 (5.2%) |
|
|
| 2.0E-7 | 2.6E-10 | 4 (2.8%) | 1658 (21.6%) |
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|
| 2.3E-2 | 4.9E-04 | 14 (9.9%) | 266 (3.5%) |
|
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| 2.1E-3 | 1.2E-5 | 47 (33.3%) | 3993 (52%) |
|
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| 1.1E-2 | 8.7E-5 | 29 (20.6%) | 2774 (36.1%) |
|
| Molecular function | |||||
|
| 2.4E-3 | 1.4E-5 | 8 (5.7%) | 1434 (18.7%) |
|
|
| 2.4E-3 | 1.5E-5 | 8 (5.7%) | 1443 (18.8%) |
|
|
| 3.2E-3 | 2.1E-5 | 8 (5.7%) | 1414 (18.4%) |
|
| Cellular component | |||||
|
| 4.8E-2 | 4.7E-4 | 55 (39.0%) | 2002 (26.1%) |
|
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| 3.9E-7 | 6.0E-10 | 25 (17.7%) | 302 (3.9%) |
|
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| 3.5E-4 | 1.6E-6 | 11 (7.8%) | 89 (1.1%) |
|
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| 2.0E-7 | 2.7E-10 | 14 (9.9%) | 2545 (33.1%) |
|
Genes in bold type correspond to downregulated genes in the microarray whereas up regulated genes appear in normal type
Affected KEGG pathways at the onset of European sea bass puberty
| Pathway name | Genes involved |
|---|---|
| Metabolic pathways | |
| - Nucleotide metabolism |
|
| - Retinol metabolism |
|
| - Lipid metabolism |
|
| - Amino acid metabolism |
|
| Cellular processes | |
| - Cell cycle |
|
| - Meiosis |
|
| - DNA replication and repair |
|
| - Focal adhesion |
|
| Genetic information processing | |
| - FoxO signalling pathway |
|
| - Hippo signalling pathway |
|
| - Jak-STAT signalling pathway |
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| - TGF beta signalling pathway |
|
| - MAPK signalling pathway |
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| - TNF signalling pathway |
|
| - Toll-like receptor signalling pathway |
|
| - Wnt signalling pathway |
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| - PI3K-Akt signalling pathway |
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| - cAMP signalling pathway |
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| - Hedgehog signalling pathway |
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| - Rap1 signalling pathway |
|
| Endocrine system | |
| - Prolactin signalling pathway |
|
| - Renin secretion |
|
| - Thyroid hormone signalling pathway |
|
Downregulated genes appear in bold type whereas upregulated genes appear in normal type
Fig. 4qPCR results for genes differentially expressed in the microarray during the onset of puberty in the European sea bass. Genes were selected according to their relevance in different reproductive events. a Genes involved in cell proliferation and cell cycle progression; proliferating cell nuclear antigen (pcna), centromere protein I (cenpi), spindle pole body component 25 (spc25), centromere protein f (cenpf), thyroid hormone receptor interactor 13 (trip13), and cdc28 protein kinase (cdc28). b Genes involved in reproduction and growth; antimüllerian hormone (amh), aquaporin 1 (aqp1), secretogranin II (sgII), agouti-related protein 2 (agrp2), insulin-like growth factor binding protein 6 (igfbp6). c Genes involved in the RA signalling pathway: RA-metabolizing enzyme cytochrome P450 26a1 (cyp26a1), retinol binding protein 4 (rbp4), RA-binding protein (crabp1). This group also includes three RA-nuclear receptors, RA receptor alpha (rarα), retinoid X receptor alpha (rxrα), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (pparγ) due to their relevance in this pathway. The stage-specific expression levels were normalized to those of the constitutively expressed 18S rRNA gene in each sample. Expression data are shown as mean normalized expression + SEM. Y-axis is represented in logarithmic scale for easier visualization. For each gene, bars on the left (blue) correspond to stage I testes and bars on the right (red) to stage II testes
Fig. 5Correlation between microarray and qPCR results. Fold change (FC) induction values of the different gene transcripts are plotted as log2 values of the relative fold change. The X-axis represent microarray data whereas the Y axis corresponds to qPCR data. The regression line and the corresponding r coefficient are also represented. For gene symbols and complete gene names see caption of Fig. 4
Fig. 6Phylogenetic tree of Cyp26 family proteins. The tree was constructed using the Neighbor-Joining method. The bootstrap consensus tree inferred from 1000 replicates is taken to represent the evolutionary history of the taxa analysed. The percentage of times each branching was obtained out of the 1000 bootstraps is shown next to the nodes. The evolutionary distances were computed using the Poisson correction method. All positions containing alignment gaps and missing data were eliminated in pairwise sequence comparisons (pairwise deletion option). Phylogenetic analyses were conducted in MEGA4 [49]. A cyp26b1-like isoform from lamprey was used as outgroup to root the tree. GenBank/Ensembl accession numbers of the sequences used to generate the tree appear listed in Additional file 7
Fig. 7Tissue distribution of European sea bass transcripts involved in different biological processes during sea bass early puberty. Biological processes include: cell proliferation and cell cycle progression (pcna, cenpi, spc25, cenpf, trip13, and cdc28); reproduction (aqp1, amh, sgII, agrp2, and igfbp6; RA signalling pathway (cyp26a1, rbp4, crabp1, rarα, rxrα, and pparγ). The expression was detected by RT-PCR in different tissues including telencephalon (Tl), pituitary (Pt), cerebellum (Ce), spleen (Sp), gills (Gi), head kidney (Hk), liver (Li), posterior kidney (Ki), testis (Te), ovary (Ov), heart (Ht), and gut (Gu). 18S ribosomal RNA (r18S) was used as a positive internal control to check for the integrity of the cDNA template. For complete gene names see caption of Fig. 4