Abstract

More than 1,500 fish species are hermaphroditic, but no hermaphroditic lineage appears to be evolutionarily ancient in fishes. Thus, whether more than one sex at a time was present during the evolutionary shift from gonochorism to hermaphroditism in fishes is an intriguing question. Ectopic oocytes were created in the ovotestes of protandrous black porgy via the withdrawal of estradiol (E2) administration. These ectopic oocytes reprogrammed the surrounding cells, which changed from Sertoli cells to follicle-like cells. We observed that gdf9 and bmp15 expression was localized in the primary oocytes and gradually decreased after oocytes entered a secondary oocyte stage. Robust expression of gdf9 and bmp15 in ectopic oocytes was associated with the surrounding Sertoli cells. However, blocking Cyp19a1a activity and increasing androgen levels did not stimulate the expression of gdf9 and bmp15. Thus, the robust gdf9 and bmp15 expression was not related to the inappropriate male microenvironment. Furthermore, in vitro data demonstrated that gdf9 and bmp15 were not downstream genes of Figla signaling. Therefore, our results suggest that there are two independent mechanisms, a Figla-dependent pathway and a Figla-independent pathway, by which oocyte-surrounding cells are altered from a male somatic fate to a female somatic fate. This functional switch might clarify how oocytes created an appropriate microenvironment during the transition from the ancient gonochorism to the present hermaphroditism.

Highlights

  • Most hermaphroditic fishes change sex during their lifetime in response to internal or environmental cues

  • We demonstrated that gdf9 and bmp15 were localized in primary oocytes and that their expression gradually decreased after oocytes entered the secondary oocyte stage

  • The data indicated that robust expression of gdf9 and bmp15 was associated with ectopic oocytes surrounded by Sertoli cells but not with the inappropriately male microenvironment

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Summary

Introduction

Most hermaphroditic fishes change sex during their lifetime in response to internal or environmental cues. These sequential sex changes in fishes include 3 primary forms: protogyny (female-to-male sex change), protandry (male-to-female sex change), and bi-directional sex change. No hermaphroditic lineage appears to be evolutionarily ancient in fishes [1]. An intriguing question is how the simultaneous presence of more than one sex occurred during the evolutionary shift from gonochorism to hermaphroditism in fish.

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