Temporal difference between testis and ovary determinations with possible involvement of testosterone and aromatase in gonadal differentiation in TSD lacking lizard, Calotes versicolor

Ganesh, Subramaniam ; Choudhary, Bibha ; Raman, Rajiva (1999) Temporal difference between testis and ovary determinations with possible involvement of testosterone and aromatase in gonadal differentiation in TSD lacking lizard, Calotes versicolor Journal of Experimental Zoology, 283 (6). pp. 600-607. ISSN 0022-104X

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Official URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/(SICI)1...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-010X(19990501)283:6<600::AID-JEZ12>3.0.CO;2-7

Abstract

In the garden lizard, Calotes versicolor, which lacks identifiable sex chromosomes, incubation temperature also does not have a deterministic effect on the gender. However, the embryos reared at high temperature (33–35°C) have a shorter duration of incubation as well as gonadal differentiation. In contrast, exogenous application of the male hormone testosterone to embryos at ambient temperature (28°C) results in almost all individuals with only testis. Thus the testosterone treatment reverts genic females to males and accelerates the differentiation of testis, a feature similar to the high-temperature treatment. Treatment of eggs with estradiol shows no difference from that seen in the untreated eggs. The present series of experiments was done to establish the “window” of testosterone sensitivity and to understand the interaction between sex hormones and high temperature on gonadal differentiation. The period between day 5 and 15 of embryonic development was the window period of testosterone sensitivity for sex reversal. This period coincided with the formation of the genital ridge and its differentiation into cortex and medulla. Treatment of the 33°C-reared embryos with testosterone resulted in hatchlings of both the sexes, in contrast to only males at the ambient temperature. In contrast, at the same temperature (33°C), all the dihydrotestosterone (nonaromatisable testosterone)–treated embryos hatched into males. However, those given estradiol showed no sex bias regardless of the day of application and the concentration of drug. Eggs were also treated with aromatase inhibitor, CGS 16949 A, at ambient temperature and at 33°C. All the 33°C eggs to which the drug was given on day 25 hatched into males. These results suggest that though high temperature has no direct effect on sex determination in this species, it may have a stimulatory effect on aromatase activity, leading to the conversion of the exogenously applied testosterone into estradiol and permitting ovarian differentiation in the genic females. It also follows from the present report that the pathway of testis formation in Calotes versicolor is triggered much earlier, and irreversibly, than that for the ovary.

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