To be sperm, or not to be sperm?

Published: Friday, June 12, 2015 - 10:22 in Biology & Nature

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This image shows young medaka born using normal eggs and sperm from female fish lacking functional foxl3 genes.
National Institute for Basic Biology
Dr. Toshiya Nishimura is shown in an aquarium room at the National Institute for Basic Biology.
National Institute for Basic Biology
Female medaka lacking foxl3 genes shows standard female body shape.  In the ovaries of foxl3 mutant female medaka, a large number of sperm and a small number of eggs are formed.
National Institute for Basic Biology

Researchers in Japan have found, for the first time in vertebrates, a genetic switch that determines whether germ cells become sperm or eggs. The gene is named foxl3, and has been identified using a small fish called medaka (Oryzias latipes). In medaka without this gene's functionality, surprisingly, sperm are produced in the ovaries of females. The sperm that are produced function normally, and have been confirmed to produce normal offspring. These results will be announced in the journal Science through Science Express the online pre-print version on June 11th. Dr. Toshiya Nishimura, Associate Professor Minoru Tanaka and their colleagues of the National Institute for Basic Biology, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, in collaboration with Dr. Satoru Kobayashi of the Okazaki Institute for Integrative Bioscience, and through joint research with Kyushu University's Dr. Mikita Suyama and Dr. Yasuyuki Ohkawa, revealed that the foxl3 gene works in the germ cells of females "to suppress differentiation into sperm".

In females lacking functional foxl3 genes, the small fish's body appearance is still totally female, however a large number of sperm are formed in the ovaries, and a small number of eggs are formed at the same time.

It has also become clear that in these females lacking the function of foxl3 functional sperm can be obtained in a shorter period of time than in normal wild-type males. Applied research into uses for aquaculture is already underway.

"In spite of the environment surrounding the germ cells being female, the fact that functional sperm has been made surprised me greatly. That this sexual switch present in the Germ Cells is independent of the body's sex is an entirely new finding," Dr. Nishimura said.

Dr. Tanaka commented: "While germ cells can become either sperm or eggs, nobody knew that in vertebrates the germ cells have a switch mechanism to decide their own sperm or egg fate. Our result indicates that once the decision is made the germ cells have the ability to go all the way to the end. I believe it is of very large significance that this mechanism has been found."

Source: National Institutes of Natural Sciences

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