4.6 Article

Comparison of Growth-Related Traits and Gene Expression Profiles Between the Offspring of Neomale (XX) and Normal Male (XY) Rainbow Trout

Journal

MARINE BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages 229-243

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10126-015-9612-5

Keywords

Growth; Rainbow trout; Sex reversed; Gene expression; Liver; White muscle

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Strategic Grant

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All-female lines of fish are created by crossing sex reversed (XX genotype) males with normal females. All-female lines avoid the deleterious phenotypic effects that are typical of precocious maturation in males. To determine whether all-female and mixed sex populations of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) differ in performance, we compared the growth and gene expression profiles in progeny groups produced by crossing a XX male and a XY male to the same five females. Body weight and length were measured in the resulting all-female (XX) and mixed sex (XX/XY) offspring groups. Microarray experiments with liver and white muscle were used to determine if the gene expression profiles of large and small XX offspring differ from those in large and small XX/XY offspring. We detected no significant differences in body length and weight between offspring groups but XX offspring were significantly less variable in the value of these traits. A large number of upregulated genes were shared between the large XX and large XX/XY offspring; the small XX and small XX/XY offspring also shared similar expression profiles. No GO category differences were seen in the liver or between the large XX and large XX/XY offspring in the muscle. The greatest differences between the small XX and small XX/XY offspring were in the genes assigned to the small molecule metabolic process and cellular metabolic process GO level 3 categories. Similarly, genes within these categories as well as the category macromolecule metabolic process were more highly expressed in small compared to large XX fish.

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