Abstract

In salmonids, the development of an indifferent gonad into a testis or an ovary is normally determined chromosomally but can be reversed or changed by the administration of exogenous steroids during specific times in embryonic development. Because the gonads of sexually mature rainbow trout (RBT) are capable of regeneration following surgical removal and since regeneration of some tissue involves dedifferentiation, the objective of this experiment was to determine if the phenotypic sex of RBT gonads could be reversed during the regenerative process. In experiment 1, male RBT were surgically gonadectomized (Gx) or left intact and subsequently treated with estradiol-17beta, a steroid that feminizes male RBT embryos. All Gx males regenerated testicular tissue regardless of treatment. Likewise, the gonads of sham-operated, intact fish treated with exogenous estrogen showed no evidence of sex-reversal. In experiment 2, testes from masculinized females (XX genotype; male phenotype) were surgically removed. In all cases, only testicular tissue was regenerated in the masculinized females. Taken together, these results are consistent with the conclusion that gonads of salmonid fishes are not susceptible to sex-reversing stimuli during the regenerative process and that gonadal regeneration in salmonids is a result of cellular proliferation of the remaining gonadal remnant.

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