@phdthesis{Fischer2014, author = {Fischer, Peter}, title = {Untersuchungen zum Einfluss der Anzahl primordialer Keimzellen auf die Geschlechtsbestimmung von Medaka, Oryzias latipes}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-106846}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2014}, abstract = {Die primordialen Keimzellen (PGCs) sind die einzigen Zellen des Embryos, die die genetische Information von einer Generation an die n{\"a}chste weiter geben k{\"o}nnen. Es wurde gezeigt, dass in allen bislang untersuchten Knochenfischen die Anzahl der Urgeschlechtszellen w{\"a}hrend der Embryonalentwicklung der erste sichtbare Unterschied zwischen M{\"a}nnchen und Weibchen ist. Daraus ergibt sich die Frage, ob die Anzahl der primordialen Keimzellen das Geschlecht bestimmt, oder ob die somatischen Zellen je nach sexueller Identit{\"a}t die Urgeschlechtszellen zur Proliferation anregen. Um zu untersuchen, wie die Anzahl der Urgeschlechtszellen mit der Geschlechtsdetermination zusammenh{\"a}ngt, habe ich in dieser Arbeit die Anzahl der Urgeschlechtszellen manipuliert und deren Schicksal im Verlauf der Embryonalentwicklung verfolgt. Weiterhin untersuchte ich, in wieweit die Temperatur einen Einfluss auf die Geschlechtsbestimmung hat und ob sie Auswirkungen auf die Anzahl und die Wanderung der Urgeschlechtszellen hat beim Medaka hat. Durch meine Experimente, in denen ich die Fische w{\"a}hrend der Embryonalentwicklung bei verschiedenen Temperaturen hielt, konnte ich zeigen, dass beim Medaka der genetische Geschlechtsbestimmungsmechanismus durch erh{\"o}hte Temperatur {\"u}berschrieben werden kann. Die Temperaturerh{\"o}hung in der Embryonalentwicklung f{\"u}hrt zu einer Weibchen­-zu­-M{\"a}nnchen Geschlechtsumkehr. Dabei wird die Anzahl der primordialen Keimzellen im Vergleich zu den Kontrollen reduziert. Zudem wird durch die h{\"o}here Temperatur das autosomale dmrt1a viel fr{\"u}her angeschaltet, wa sauf einen alternativenSignalweg deutet, der die m{\"a}nnliche Geschlechtsentwicklung in XX geschlechtsumgewandelten Tieren steuert.}, subject = {Geschlechtsbestimmung}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{ContarAdolfi2017, author = {Contar Adolfi, Mateus}, title = {Sex determination and meiosis in medaka: The role of retinoic acid}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-136335}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Sex determination (SD) is a complex and diverse developmental process that leads to the decision whether the bipotential gonad anlage will become a testis or an ovary. This mechanism is regulated by gene cascades, networks and/or chromosomal systems, and can be influenced by fluctuations of extrinsic factors like temperature, exposure to hormones and pollution. Within vertebrates, the group of fish show the widest variety of sex determination mechanism. This whole diversity of processes and mechanisms converges to the formation of two different gametes, the eggs and the sperm, the first bigger and static, and the second smaller and motile. Meiosis is crucial for the formation of both types of gametes, and the timing of meiosis entry is one of the first recognizable differences between male and female in vertebrates. The germ cells go into meiosis first in female than in male, and in mammals, this event has been shown to be regulated by retinoic acid (RA). This small polar molecule induces in the germ cells the expression of the pre-meiotic marker Stra8 (stimulated by retinoic acid gene 8), which is necessary for meiosis initiation. Interestingly, genome analyzes have shown that the majority of fish (including medaka) lack the stra8 gene, adding a question mark to the role of RA in meiosis induction in this group. Since a role of RA in entry of meiosis and sexual development of fish is still far from being understood, I investigated in medaka (Oryzias latipes) a possible signaling function of RA during the SD period in embryos and in reproductively active gonads of adults. I generated a transgenic medaka line that reports responsiveness to RA in vivo. With this tool, I compared RA responsiveness with the expression of the main gene involved in the synthesis of RA. My results show that there is a de-correlation between the action of RA with its source. In adults, expression of the RA metabolizing enzymes show sexually dimorphic RA levels, with aldh1a2 levels being higher in testis, and cyp26a1 stronger in female gonad. In ovary, the responsiveness is restricted to the early meiotic oocytes. In testis, RA is acting directly in the pre-meiotic cells, but also in Sertoli and Leydig cells. Treatment experiments on testis organ culture showed that RA pathway activation leads to a decrease in meiosis markers expression levels. During the development, RA responsiveness in the germ cells was observed in both sexes much earlier than the first female meiosis entry. Treatments with RA-synthesis inhibitor show a decrease in meiosis markers expression levels only after the sex differentiation period in female. Expression analyzes of embryos treated with exogenous RA showed induction of dmrt1a at the gonad levels and an increase of amh levels. Both genes are not only involved in male formation, but also in the regulation of germ cell proliferation and differentiation. RA is important in meiosis induction and gametogenesis in adult medaka. However, there is no evidence for a similar role of RA in initiating the first meiosis in female germ cells at the SD stage. Moreover, contrary to common expectation, RA seems to induce sex related genes that are involved indirectly in meiosis inhibition. In this thesis, I showed for the first time that RA can be involved in both induction and inhibition of meiosis entry, depending on the sex and the developmental stage in a stra8-independent model organism.}, subject = {Japank{\"a}rpfling}, language = {en} }