1. Involvement of androgen receptor in sex determination in an amphibian species
- Author
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Masahisa Nakamura, Jun Fujii, Yasuki Matsuo, Akira Oike, Takashi Hasebe, Koichi Kawakami, Mi Sook Min, Maho Kodama, and Atsuko Ishizuya-Oka
- Subjects
Male ,Embryo, Nonmammalian ,Ranidae ,Male sex determination ,lcsh:Medicine ,Animals, Genetically Modified ,Testis ,Morphogenesis ,Testosterone ,lcsh:Science ,X chromosome ,Phylogeny ,Genetics ,Multidisciplinary ,Sexual Differentiation ,Sex Chromosomes ,biology ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Steroid 17-alpha-Hydroxylase ,Reptile Biology ,Phylogenetics ,Transgenic Engineering ,Receptors, Androgen ,Female ,Development of the gonads ,Genetic Engineering ,Research Article ,Biotechnology ,Amphibian ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Internal medicine ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animals ,Evolutionary Systematics ,Evolutionary Biology ,Ovotestis ,Ovary ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Sex Determination ,Sex Determination Processes ,biology.organism_classification ,Androgen receptor ,Endocrinology ,lcsh:Q ,Rana rugosa ,Zoology ,Developmental Biology ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
In mice and humans, the androgen receptor (AR) gene, located on the X chromosome, is not known to be involved in sex determination. In the Japanese frog Rana rugosa the AR is located on the sex chromosomes (X, Y, Z and W). Phylogenetic analysis shows that the AR on the X chromosome (X-AR) of the Korean R. rugosa is basal and segregates into two clusters: one containing W-AR of Japanese R. rugosa, the other containing Y-AR. AR expression is twice as high in ZZ (male) compared to ZW (female) embryos in which the W-AR is barely expressed. Higher AR-expression may be associated with male sex determination in this species. To examine whether the Z-AR is involved in sex determination in R. rugosa, we produced transgenic (Tg) frogs carrying an exogenous Z-AR. Analysis of ZW Tg frogs revealed development of masculinized gonads or ‘ovotestes’. Expression of CYP17 and Dmrt1, genes known to be activated during normal male gonadal development, were up-regulated in the ZW ovotestis. Testosterone, supplied to the rearing water, completed the female-to-male sex-reversal in the AR-Tg ZW frogs. Here we report that Z-AR is involved in male sex-determination in an amphibian species.
- Published
- 2014