| Literature DB >> 34880131 |
Benjamin Geffroy1, Mathieu Besson2,3, Núria Sánchez-Baizán4, Frederic Clota5,3, Alexander Goikoetxea5, Bastien Sadoul5,6, François Ruelle7, Marie-Odile Blanc7, Hugues Parrinello8, Sophie Hermet9, Eva Blondeau-Bidet9, Marine Pratlong8, Francesc Piferrer4, Marc Vandeputte5,3, François Allal5.
Abstract
In most animals, sex determination occurs at conception, when sex chromosomes are segregated following Mendelian laws. However, in multiple reptiles and fishes, this genetic sex can be overridden by external factors after fertilization or birth. In some species, the genetic sex may also be governed by multiple genes, further limiting our understanding of sex determination in such species. We used the European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) as a model and combined genomic (using a single nucleotide polymorphism chip) and transcriptomic (RNA-Sequencing) approaches to thoroughly depict this polygenic sex determination system and its interaction with temperature. We estimated genetic sex tendency (eGST), defined as the estimated genetic liability to become a given sex under a liability threshold model for sex determination, which accurately predicts the future phenotypic sex. We found evidence that energetic pathways, concerning the regulation of lipids and glucose, are involved in sex determination and could explain why females tend to exhibit higher energy levels and improved growth compared to males. Besides, early exposure to high-temperature up-regulated sox3, followed by sox9a in individuals with intermediate eGST, but not in individuals showing highly female-biased eGST, providing the most parsimonious explanation for temperature-induced masculinization. This gonadal state was maintained likely by DNA methylation and the up-regulation of several genes involved in histone modifications, including jmjd1c Overall, we describe a sex determination system resulting from continuous genetic and environmental influences in an animal. Our results provide significant progress in our understanding of the mechanisms underlying temperature-induced masculinization in fish.Entities:
Keywords: epigenetic; fish; genomics; sex determination; temperature
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34880131 PMCID: PMC8685686 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2112660118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779