The objective of the present study is to observe the effect of exogenous steroids, methyl testosterone (MT) and ethynyl estradiol (EEL) on gonadal differentiation and analyze its effect on the expression of several genes during testicular and ovarian differentiation in juvenile catfish. Exogenous hormone treatments (MT and EEL) were given by immersion at different days of hatching. The histological analysis revealed that the EEL- and MT-treatments resulted in the initiation of ovarian and testicular differentiation, respectively. This is further supported by specific expression of two forms of DMRT1 in the MT-treated group but not in the EEL-treated group at 47 days after hatching (dah). The reverse is true for the expression of ovarian aromatase. Results of the semi-quantitative RT-PCR show that brain aromatase transcript levels are high in 47 dah control (histologically female) and 47 dah EEL-treated fish, as compared to 47 dah MT-treated fish. At 60 dah, brain aromatase showed elevation in its expression. Interestingly, the expression pattern of 3 beta-HSD did not show any change in EEL- and MT-treated fish. The present study also provides a strategy to study sex differentiation, for those species where genetic sex population is unavailable.
In the present study, thiourea-induced thyroid hormone depletion and thyroxine (T(4)) 'overdose' were used as a strategy to understand the influence of thyroid hormones on ovarian recrudescence of juvenile (3-months-old), immature (8-months-old) and adult (1-year-old) air-breathing catfish, Clarias gariepinus. Thiourea-induced thyroid hormone depletion in juvenile catfish impaired ovarian development, but no significant effect was observed in immature catfish and during late stage of ovarian recrudescence of mature catfish. T(4) treatment in females undergoing late stages of ovarian recrudescence induced rapid oocyte growth by promoting its early entry into maturational phase as evident from the presence of more number of vitellogenic and post-vitellogenic follicles, decrease in aromatse immunoreactivity and reduced estradiol-17beta levels. Hence, thyroid hormones have an important role to play during early stages of ovarian development and vitellogenesis of catfish and also indicating that thyroid has a stage dependent effect on ovary.
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