Sex-specific DNA in reptiles with temperature sex determination
✍ Scribed by Demas, Suzanne ;Duronslet, Marcel ;Wachtel, Stephen ;Caillouet, Charles ;Nakamura, Dean
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 596 KB
- Volume
- 253
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-104X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Banded krait minor (“Bkm”) satellite DNA, originating in the W‐chromosome of the snake Bungarus fasciatus, has been found in the genome of diverse eukaryotic species including fruit fly, quail, and horse. Concentrations of Bkm have been found in the presumptive W‐chromosome of snakes with isomorphic sex chromosomes and in the male‐determining region of the Y‐chromosome in mouse and man. We therefore asked whether Bkm‐related DNA might be present in quantitative excess in DNA from males or females in two related species of sea turtle, Chelonia mydas, in which sex is determined by the temperature of the incubating egg, and Lepidochelys kempi, in which the critical sex‐determining temperature has recently been described. Filter hybridization with the Bkm 2(8) probe revealed male‐specific fragments in both species; female‐specific fragments were also revealed in C. mydas. Sex‐specific DNA sequences in temperature‐sex‐determined species such as Kemp's ridley and the green turtle were unexpected, but could be explained if there were an underlying genetic mode of sex determination in these animals, or alternatively, if temperature‐influenced sex determination involved structural modifications in DNA adjacent to, or directly concerned with, the sex‐determining genes. If these results are confirmed across a broader sample of sea turtles, the techniques described in this paper might be used routinely to identify gender in the young of these endangered animals, in which male and female are grossly indistinguishable.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Dmrt1 has been implicated as an important factor in sex determination in all classes of vertebrates, including reptiles with temperature‐dependent sex determination (TSD). Specifically, early embryonic expression of Dmrt1 appears to be an integral part of normal testicular development i
## Abstract A brief review of our current understanding (or lack of understanding) of the molecular basis of temperature‐dependent sex determination (TSD) in reptiles is presented. Current theories are discussed: yolk steroids as sex determinants, the brain as the driver for TSD and the enzyme arom
Sex determination in egg-laying amniotes may be fundamentally different from that of placental mammals. The mammalian ovary differentiates normally in the absence of estrogen, whereas estrogen seems to be crucial for proper ovarian development in birds, reptiles, and lower vertebrates. Estrogens are