AI Article Synopsis

  • In mice, a protein called CD9 helps sperm and egg to combine, but knocking out CD9 doesn't affect their ability to have babies.
  • In zebrafish that don't have a similar protein called cd9b, they lay fewer eggs and not many get fertilized, showing they're less fertile.
  • The fertility problems in zebrafish are more complicated than in mice, impacting both male and female fish, and are not just because of their mating habits.

Article Abstract

In mice, CD9 expression on the egg is required for efficient sperm-egg fusion and no effects on ovulation or male fertility are observed in CD9 null animals. Here we show that cd9b knockout zebrafish also appear to have fertility defects. In contrast to mice, fewer eggs were laid by cd9b knockout zebrafish pairs and, of the eggs laid, a lower percentage were fertilised. These effects could not be linked to primordial germ cell numbers or migration as these were not altered in the cd9b mutants. The decrease in egg numbers could be rescued by exchanging either cd9b knockout partner, male or female, for a wildtype partner. However, the fertilisation defect was only rescued by crossing a cd9b knockout female with a wildtype male. To exclude effects of mating behaviour we analysed clutch size and fertilisation using in vitro fertilisation techniques. Number of eggs and fertilisation rates were significantly reduced in the cd9b mutants suggesting the fertility defects are not solely due to courtship behaviours. Our results indicate that CD9 plays a more complex role in fish fertility than in mammals, with effects in both males and females.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9648739PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0277274PLOS

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