Abstract

BackgroundIn many taxa, males and females are very distinct phenotypically, and these differences often reflect divergent selective pressures acting on the sexes. Phenotypic sexual dimorphism almost certainly reflects differing patterns of gene expression between the sexes, and microarray studies have documented widespread sexually dimorphic gene expression. Although the evolutionary significance of sexual dimorphism in gene expression remains unresolved, these studies have led to the formulation of a hypothesis that male-driven evolution has resulted in the masculinization of animal transcriptomes. Here we use a microarray assessment of sex- and gonad-biased gene expression to test this hypothesis in zebrafish.ResultsBy using zebrafish Affymetrix microarrays to compare gene expression patterns in male and female somatic and gonadal tissues, we identified a large number of genes (5899) demonstrating differences in transcript abundance between male and female Danio rerio. Under conservative statistical significance criteria, all sex-biases in gene expression were due to differences between testes and ovaries. Male-enriched genes were more abundant than female-enriched genes, and expression bias for male-enriched genes was greater in magnitude than that for female-enriched genes. We also identified a large number of genes demonstrating elevated transcript abundance in testes and ovaries relative to male body and female body, respectively.ConclusionOverall our results support the hypothesis that male-biased evolutionary pressures have resulted in male-biased patterns of gene expression. Interestingly, our results seem to be at odds with a handful of other microarray-based studies of sex-specific gene expression patterns in zebrafish. However, ours was the only study designed to address this specific hypothesis, and major methodological differences among studies could explain the discrepancies. Regardless, all of these studies agree that transcriptomic sex differences in D. rerio are widespread despite the apparent absence of heterogamety. These differences likely make important contributions to phenotypic sexual dimorphism in adult zebrafish; thus, from an evolutionary standpoint, the precise roles of sex-specific selection and sexual conflict in the evolution of sexually dimorphic gene expression are very important. The results of our study and others like it set the stage for further work aimed at directly addressing this exciting issue in comparative genomics.

Highlights

  • In many taxa, males and females are very distinct phenotypically, and these differences often reflect divergent selective pressures acting on the sexes

  • Phenotypic sexual dimorphism may be mediated by sex differences in gene expression when a key transcript differs in abundance between males and females

  • These two mechanisms are by no means mutually exclusive, as sex-specific aspects of the genome result in downstream sex differences in gene expression at sex-shared loci, especially when the original sex-unique genes are highly pleiotropic

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Summary

Introduction

Males and females are very distinct phenotypically, and these differences often reflect divergent selective pressures acting on the sexes. Fixed genetic differences between males and females via heteromorphic sex chromosomes [6] or a sexdetermination locus provide one basis for sexual dimorphism In this case, the two sexes possess partially distinct genomes. Sexes need not have distinct genomes for sexual dimorphism to exist, because species characterized by environmental sex determination maintain a considerable degree of sex-based phenotypic differentiation with respect to primary and often secondary sexual traits [7,8,9] In these cases of non-genetic sex determination, sex differences in gene expression are obviously important sources of sexual differentiation and dimorphism

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