Teleost fish are the most diverse group of vertebrates and provide opportunities to study the evolution of sex determination (SD) systems. Using genomic and functional analyses, we identified a male-specific duplication of
anti-Müllerian hormone
(
amh
) gene as the male master sex-determining (MSD) gene in
Sebastes schlegelii
. By resequencing 10 males and 10 females, we characterized a 5 kb-long fragment in HiC_Scaffold_12 as a male-specific region, which contained an
amh
gene (named
amhy
). We then demonstrated that
amhy
is a duplication of autosomal
amh
that was later translocated to the ancestral Y chromosome.
amha
and
amhy
shared high-nucleotide identity with the most significant difference being two insertions in intron 4 of
amhy
. Furthermore,
amhy
overexpression triggered female-to-male sex reversal in
S. schlegelii
, displaying its fundamental role in driving testis differentiation. We developed a PCR assay which successfully identified sexes in two species of northwest Pacific rockfish related to
S. schlegelii
. However, the PCR assay failed to distinguish the sexes in a separate clade of northeast Pacific rockfish. Our study provides new examples of
amh
as the MSD in fish and sheds light on the convergent evolution of
amh
duplication as the driving force of sex determination in different fish taxa.
The black rockfish (Sebastes schlegelii) is a teleost in which eggs are fertilized internally and retained in the maternal reproductive system, where they undergo development until live birth (viviparity). In the present study, we report a chromosome‐level black rockfish genome assembly. High‐throughput transcriptome analysis (RNA‐seq and ATAC‐seq) coupled with in situ hybridization (ISH) and immunofluorescence reveal several candidate genes for maternal preparation, sperm storage and release, and hatching. We propose that zona pellucida (ZP) proteins retain sperm at the oocyte envelope, while genes in two distinct astacin metalloproteinase subfamilies serve to release sperm from the ZP and free the embryo from chorion at prehatching stage. We present a model of black rockfish reproduction, and propose that the rockfish ovarian wall has a similar function to the uterus of mammals. Together, these genomic data reveal unprecedented insights into the evolution of an unusual teleost life history strategy, and provide a sound foundation for studying viviparity in nonmammalian vertebrates and an invaluable resource for rockfish ecological and evolutionary research.
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