Publications by authors named "Melody Wahl"

Sexual manipulation in the giant freshwater prawn has proven successful in generating monosex (both all-male and all-female) populations for aquaculture using a crustacean-specific endocrine gland, the androgenic gland (AG), which serves as a key masculinizing factor by producing and secreting an insulin-like AG hormone (IAG). Here, we provide a summary of the advancements from the discovery of the AG and IAG in decapods through to the development of monosex populations in . We discuss the broader sexual development pathway, which is highly divergent across decapods, and provide our future perspective on the utility of novel genetic and genomic tools in promoting refined approaches towards monosex biotechnology.

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Article Synopsis
  • The giant freshwater prawn is well-researched in aquaculture, but gaps remain in understanding its embryonic development and sexual differentiation mechanisms.
  • By conducting RNA sequencing on male and female embryos over five developmental days, researchers characterized gene expression related to early development stages.
  • They discovered significant differences in gene expression between sexes, indicating that unique genetic factors may be involved in the prawn's sex differentiation, creating a transcriptional map that will aid future studies in this area.
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In vertebrate reproduction, metabolism, growth and development, essential roles are played by glycoprotein hormones, such as follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH) and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), all of which are heterodimers consisting of two subunits, a structurally identical alpha subunit, and a variable beta subunit, which provides specificity. A 'new' glycoprotein hormone heterodimer identified in both vertebrates and invertebrates, including decapod crustaceans, was shown to be composed of the glycoprotein alpha 2 (GPA2) and glycoprotein beta 5 (GPB5) subunits. The putative receptor for GPA2/GPB5 in invertebrates is the leucine-rich repeat-containing G protein-coupled receptor 1 (LGR1).

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