Black porgy, Acanthopagrus schlegeli Bleeker, a marine protandrous hermaphrodite, is functional male for the first two years of life but begins to sexually change to female after the third year. Testicular tissue and ovarian tissue was separated by connective tissue in the bisexual gonad. This sex pattern provides a very good model to study the endocrine mechanism of sex change in fish. The annual profiles of plasma estradiol, vitellogenin and 11-ketotestosterone concentrations in males were significantly different from those in the three-year-old females. Significantly high levels of plasma estradiol during the prespawning/spawning season and low levels of plasma 11-ketotestosterone during the spawning season were observed in the inversing females. No difference of plasma testosterone levels was observed in males and females. Oral administration of estradiol stimulated high levels of gonadal aromatase activity, plasma gonadotropin II levels and sex change in the two-year-old fish. Exogenous estradiol administered for 5-6 months induced a reversible sex change in one- and two-year-old fish. The sensitive period for estradiol treatment of sex change is from early prespawning to spawning season. Implantation with testosterone for more than a year could not block the natural sex change in three-year-old fish. Exogenous aromatase inhibitors (1,4,6-androstatriene-3,17-dione or fadrozole) suppressed aromatase activity in the brain. Oral administration with aromatase inhibitors for a year further inhibited the natural sex change in three-year-old black porgy and all fish became functional male with spermiation. Estrogen receptor alpha gene in the ovarian tissue of bisexual gonad is significantly less expressed than that in the vitellogenic ovary of female on the basis of reverse-transcription polymerase-chain reaction. There was no difference in the annual profiles of the plasma gonadotropin II levels in the males and natural inversing females. Plasma gonadotropin II levels were significantly higher in estradiol-treated group than those in the control. It is concluded that estradiol, aromatase activity and estrogen receptor in the ovarian tissue play an important role in the natural and controlled sex change in black porgy. The association of gonadotropin and sex change in black porgy is not clear.
We investigated the mechanism of estradiol-17beta (E2) action on stimulation of LH (=gonadotropin II) release in the black porgy fish (Acanthopagrus schlegeli Bleeker) using an in vivo approach and primary cultures of dispersed pituitary cells in vitro. In vivo, E2 but not androgens (testosterone [T] and 11-ketotestosterone [11-KT]) significantly stimulated plasma LH in a dose-dependent manner. Estradiol-17beta also increased brain content of seabream GnRH. GnRH antagonist prevented E2 stimulation of LH release in vivo, indicating that the effect of E2 on LH was mediated by GnRH. In vitro, sex steroids (E2, T, 11-KT) alone had no effect on basal LH release in the cultured pituitary cells, but GnRH significantly stimulated LH release. Estradiol-17beta potentiated GnRH stimulation of LH release, an effect that was inhibited by GnRH antagonist, and 11-KT, but not T, also potentiated GnRH stimulation of LH release. The potentiating effect of 11-KT on GnRH-induced LH release in vitro was stronger than that of E2. These data suggest that E2 triggers LH release in vivo by acting both on GnRH production at the hypothalamus and on GnRH action at the pituitary. In contrast, 11-KT may only stimulate GnRH action at the pituitary. The E2) induction of LH release, through multiple interactions with GnRH control, supports a possible central role of E2in the sex change observed in the protandrous black porgy.
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