Abstract
Medaka (Oryzias latipes) are teleost fish with a XX/XY sex determination system. Recently, it was reported that high temperature (HT) induced the masculinization of XX medaka by increasing the levels of cortisol, a major glucocorticoid produced by interrenal cells in teleosts. Cortisol secretion is regulated by adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) secreted from the pituitary gland, which is partly regulated by corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) secreted from the hypothalamus. In teleosts, two crh paralogs, named crha and crhb, have been identified. Recently, the expression of crhb but not crha was upregulated by HT during gonadal sex differentiation period in medaka and loss-of-functions of its receptors under HT suppressed masculinization of XX medaka and increase of cortisol levels, suggesting that crhb is involved in masculinization induced by HT. However, the transcriptional regulation of crhb under HT has not been elucidated. We analyzed the gene expression pattern in the hypothalamus of medaka embryos incubated under HT using DNA microarray. The expressions of heat shock protein (hsp) genes, such as hsp70.1 and hsp30, were increased. Overexpression of hsp70.1 or hsp30 in cultured rat hypothalamic 4B cells significantly induced crh gene expression. Moreover, hypothalamic hsp70.1-overexpressing transgenic medaka also showed increased crhb gene expression that increased cortisol levels compared with fish incubated at a normal temperature. These results provide the first evidence that HSPs induce cortisol levels by elevating crhb gene expression in the hypothalamus.
Highlights
In vertebrates, sex is determined primarily by a combination of sex chromosomes at fertilization
QRT-PCR analysis of the hypothalamus regions of medaka embryos at 4 dpf confirmed that crhb, proopiomelanocortin, hsp70.1, hsp30, cck, and ppss3 expressions were significantly induced by high temperature (HT) (Figures 2A–F), while keratin and hce expressions were significantly reduced by HT (Figures 2G,H), similar to the DNA microarray analysis
We investigated the effect of heat shock protein (HSP) on crh expression in rat hypothalamus-derived 4B cells. hsp70 and crh expressions were markedly increased by heat shock (45◦C) of the cells, and their expressions were significantly inhibited by treatment with a HSP inhibitor (KNK 437) under heat shock conditions (Figures 3A,B). crh expression was significantly induced by the overexpression of hsp70.1 or hsp30 in 4B cells, and was further induced by their co-overexpression (Figure 3C)
Summary
Sex is determined primarily by a combination of sex chromosomes at fertilization. The medaka sex-determining gene dmy/dmrt1bY, which is found on the Y chromosome, has been identified [6,7,8]. Medaka provides an excellent vertebrate model for investigating various biological phenomena including embryonic development and sex differentiation. HT caused the masculinization of XX medaka by elevating the levels of cortisol [11, 12], the major glucocorticoid produced by the interrenal cells in teleosts [13]. It remains unclear how HT-elevated cortisol induces the masculinization of XX fish
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