Abstract

BackgroundThere are large differences between the sexes at the genetic level; these differences include heterogametic sex chromosomes and/or differences in expression of genes between the sexes. In rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) qRT-PCR studies have found significant differences in expression of several candidate sex determining genes. However, these genes represent a very small fraction of the genome and research in other species suggests there are large portions of the transcriptome that are differentially expressed between the sexes. These differences are especially noticeable once gonad differentiation and maturation has occurred, but less is known at earlier stages of development. Here we use data from a microarray and qRT-PCR to identify genes differentially expressed between the sexes at three time points in pre-hatch embryos, prior to the known timing of sexual differentiation in this species.ResultsThe microarray study revealed 883 differentially expressed features between the sexes with roughly equal numbers of male and female upregulated features across time points. Most of the differentially expressed genes on the microarray were not related to sex function, suggesting large scale differences in gene expression between the sexes are present early in development. Candidate gene analysis revealed sox9, DMRT1, Nr5a1 and wt1 were upregulated in males at some time points and foxl2, ovol1, fst and cyp19a1a were upregulated in females at some time points.ConclusionThis is the first study to identify sexual dimorphism in expression of the genome during embryogenesis in any fish and demonstrates that transcriptional differences are present before the completion of gonadogenesis.

Highlights

  • There are large differences between the sexes at the genetic level; these differences include heterogametic sex chromosomes and/or differences in expression of genes between the sexes

  • Patterns of gene expression between the sexes Repeatedly, microarray experiments have found that a substantial portion of the transcriptome is differentially expressed between the sexes [e.g. [2,5,10]]

  • Here we found evidence that a proportion of the transcriptome is differentially expressed between the sexes at early stages of development in rainbow trout, prior to the morphological differentiation of the gonads

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Summary

Introduction

There are large differences between the sexes at the genetic level; these differences include heterogametic sex chromosomes and/or differences in expression of genes between the sexes. In rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) qRT-PCR studies have found significant differences in expression of several candidate sex determining genes These genes represent a very small fraction of the genome and research in other species suggests there are large portions of the transcriptome that are differentially expressed between the sexes. Genetic differences between the sexes can broadly be separated into two groups: differences in the transcription level, where the abundance of a particular gene transcript(s) differs between the sexes (a phenomenon known as sex-biased expression), and heterogametic sex chromosomes that are present in one sex and absent in the other These two mechanisms can occur together, and often species that lack differentiated sex chromosomes exhibit sex specific gene expression [1,2]. Other studies (on model organisms like Drosophila and zebra fish) report similar differences with the greatest percentage of sex-biased expression frequently being in the gonad transcriptome of sexually mature adults [e.g. [16,7,2]]

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