Polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish

Despite the popularity of zebrafish as a research model, its sex determination (SD) mechanism is still unknown. Most cytogenetic studies failed to find dimorphic sex chromosomes and no primary sex determining switch has been identified even though the assembly of zebrafish genome sequence is near to...

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Main Authors: Siegfried, Kellee R., Liew, Woei Chang, Bartfai, Richard, Lim, Zijie, Sreenivasan, Rajini, Orban, Laszlo
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95214
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/9199
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-952142023-02-28T17:04:15Z Polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish Siegfried, Kellee R. Liew, Woei Chang Bartfai, Richard Lim, Zijie Sreenivasan, Rajini Orban, Laszlo School of Biological Sciences Despite the popularity of zebrafish as a research model, its sex determination (SD) mechanism is still unknown. Most cytogenetic studies failed to find dimorphic sex chromosomes and no primary sex determining switch has been identified even though the assembly of zebrafish genome sequence is near to completion and a high resolution genetic map is available. Recent publications suggest that environmental factors within the natural range have minimal impact on sex ratios of zebrafish populations. The primary aim of this study is to find out more about how sex is determined in zebrafish. Methodology/Principal Findings: Using classical breeding experiments, we found that sex ratios across families were wide ranging (4.8% to 97.3% males). On the other hand, repeated single pair crossings produced broods of very similar sex ratios, indicating that parental genotypes have a role in the sex ratio of the offspring. Variation among family sex ratios was reduced after selection for breeding pairs with predominantly male or female offspring, another indication that zebrafish sex is regulated genetically. Further examinations by a PCR-based “blind assay" and array comparative genomic hybridization both failed to find universal sex-linked differences between the male and female genomes. Together with the ability to increase the sex bias of lines by selective breeding, these data suggest that zebrafish is unlikely to utilize a chromosomal sex determination (CSD) system. Published version 2013-02-20T07:14:17Z 2019-12-06T19:10:29Z 2013-02-20T07:14:17Z 2019-12-06T19:10:29Z 2012 2012 Journal Article Liew, W. C., Bartfai, R., Lim, Z., Sreenivasan, R., Siegfried, K. R., & Orban, L. (2012). Polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish. PLoS ONE, 7(4). 1932-6203 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95214 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/9199 10.1371/journal.pone.0034397 22506019 en PLoS ONE © 2012 The Authors. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
description Despite the popularity of zebrafish as a research model, its sex determination (SD) mechanism is still unknown. Most cytogenetic studies failed to find dimorphic sex chromosomes and no primary sex determining switch has been identified even though the assembly of zebrafish genome sequence is near to completion and a high resolution genetic map is available. Recent publications suggest that environmental factors within the natural range have minimal impact on sex ratios of zebrafish populations. The primary aim of this study is to find out more about how sex is determined in zebrafish. Methodology/Principal Findings: Using classical breeding experiments, we found that sex ratios across families were wide ranging (4.8% to 97.3% males). On the other hand, repeated single pair crossings produced broods of very similar sex ratios, indicating that parental genotypes have a role in the sex ratio of the offspring. Variation among family sex ratios was reduced after selection for breeding pairs with predominantly male or female offspring, another indication that zebrafish sex is regulated genetically. Further examinations by a PCR-based “blind assay" and array comparative genomic hybridization both failed to find universal sex-linked differences between the male and female genomes. Together with the ability to increase the sex bias of lines by selective breeding, these data suggest that zebrafish is unlikely to utilize a chromosomal sex determination (CSD) system.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Siegfried, Kellee R.
Liew, Woei Chang
Bartfai, Richard
Lim, Zijie
Sreenivasan, Rajini
Orban, Laszlo
format Article
author Siegfried, Kellee R.
Liew, Woei Chang
Bartfai, Richard
Lim, Zijie
Sreenivasan, Rajini
Orban, Laszlo
spellingShingle Siegfried, Kellee R.
Liew, Woei Chang
Bartfai, Richard
Lim, Zijie
Sreenivasan, Rajini
Orban, Laszlo
Polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish
author_sort Siegfried, Kellee R.
title Polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish
title_short Polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish
title_full Polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish
title_fullStr Polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish
title_full_unstemmed Polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish
title_sort polygenic sex determination system in zebrafish
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95214
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/9199
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