Open Biology (Jul 2021)

A duplicated amh is the master sex-determining gene for Sebastes rockfish in the Northwest Pacific

  • Weihao Song,
  • Yuheng Xie,
  • Minmin Sun,
  • Xuemei Li,
  • Cristín K. Fitzpatrick,
  • Felix Vaux,
  • Kathleen G. O'Malley,
  • Quanqi Zhang,
  • Jie Qi,
  • Yan He

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsob.210063
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7

Abstract

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Teleost fish are the most diverse group of vertebrates and provide opportunities to study the evolution of sex determination (SD) systems. Using genomic and functional analyses, we identified a male-specific duplication of anti-Müllerian hormone (amh) gene as the male master sex-determining (MSD) gene in Sebastes schlegelii. By resequencing 10 males and 10 females, we characterized a 5 kb-long fragment in HiC_Scaffold_12 as a male-specific region, which contained an amh gene (named amhy). We then demonstrated that amhy is a duplication of autosomal amh that was later translocated to the ancestral Y chromosome. amha and amhy shared high-nucleotide identity with the most significant difference being two insertions in intron 4 of amhy. Furthermore, amhy overexpression triggered female-to-male sex reversal in S. schlegelii, displaying its fundamental role in driving testis differentiation. We developed a PCR assay which successfully identified sexes in two species of northwest Pacific rockfish related to S. schlegelii. However, the PCR assay failed to distinguish the sexes in a separate clade of northeast Pacific rockfish. Our study provides new examples of amh as the MSD in fish and sheds light on the convergent evolution of amh duplication as the driving force of sex determination in different fish taxa.

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