AI Article Synopsis

  • Sex determination in zebrafish can be influenced by environmental factors, such as exposure to cadmium (Cd) and temperature, which can lead to shifts in population sex ratios.
  • Research shows that exposure to Cd resulted in increased methylation of certain genes, leading to a trend towards feminization over generations, especially under heat stress conditions.
  • The study highlights the role of epigenetic mechanisms, particularly DNA methylation, in shaping sex ratios and suggests that parental environments can affect offspring development and sex determination.*

Article Abstract

Sex determination is a complex process that can be influenced by environment in various taxa. Disturbed environments can affect population sex ratios and thus threaten their viability. Emerging evidences support a role of epigenetic mechanisms, notably DNA methylation, in environmental sex determination (ESD). In this work, using zebrafish as model and a transgenerational experiment comprising 4 successive generations, we report a strength link between the promotor methylation level of three genes in female gonads and population sex ratio. One generation of zebrafish was exposed throughout its lifetime to cadmium (Cd), a non-essential metal, at an environmentally relevant concentration. The subsequent generations were not exposed. At the first and the third generation a subset of individuals was exposed to an elevated temperature, a well-known masculinizing factor in zebrafish. While heat was associated to an increase in the methylation level of cyp19a1a gene and population masculinization, foxl2a/dmrt1 methylation levels appeared to be influenced by Cd and fish density leading to offspring feminization. Ancestral Cd exposure indeed led to a progressive feminization of the population over generations and affected the sex plastic response of zebrafish in response to heat. The effect of Cd on the methylation level of foxl2a was observed until the third generation, supporting potential transgenerational inheritance. Our results support (i) a key role of cyp19a1a methylation in SD in zebrafish in response to environmental cues and (ii) the fact that the environment experienced by parents, namely mothers in the present case, can affect their offspring sex ratio via environment-induced DNA methylation changes in gonads.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2021.116864DOI Listing

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