Generation and genetic analysis of a rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) clonal line produced by gynogenesis

Autor: Yara Aiko Tabata, Fausto Foresti, Ricardo Shohei Hattori, Tulio Teruo Yoshinaga, Arno Juliano Butzge, Noeliton Teixeira de Araújo Júnior, Patrícia Ianella, Alexandre Rodrigues Caetano
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2024
Předmět:
Zdroj: Aquaculture Reports, Vol 36, Iss , Pp 102032- (2024)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 2352-5134
DOI: 10.1016/j.aqrep.2024.102032
Popis: The efficiency of heat-shock treatments for producing gynogenetic double haploids was evaluated using a rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) strain locally adapted in Brazil (2002 broodstock). Eleven and 15 females produced by conventional reproduction (FC) or meiotic gynogenesis (FG) were used as egg donors, respectively. Oocytes from each female were randomly divided into five uneven lots which were submitted to different treatments: (C2n) Normal diploid control, (H) Haploid control, (G-Me) Meiotic gynogenetic, (G-Mi) Mitotic gynogenetic, and (4 n) Control of suppression of the 1st cell cleavage. Homozygous yellow-colored (Dominant albino - DA) males were used as semen donors. Gynogenesis was induced by insemination of eggs with DA semen genetically inactivated by ultraviolet irradiation. Diploidization of gynogenic individuals was induced by an early heat shock to block 2nd polar body extrusion (G-Me), or a late heat shock to suppress first mitosis (G-Mi). Overall mean survival rates to eyed-egg and first feeding stages of treated groups, relative to respective C2n control group were: 19.21 and 14.90%, 13.02 and 8.09%, and 29.94 and 16.48%, for treatments G-Me, G-Mi and 4 n, respectively. When compared with C2n, all treatments showed lower survival rates at both stages. Survival of G-Me and G-Mi progeny from FG females were significantly higher when compared to progeny from FC females for both stages. Progenies from two different females observed to be 100% homozygous in analyzed informative microsatellite markers were used in subsequent cycles of gynogenic reproduction. One line originally derived from a single gynogenic female was reproduced for nine successive generations of meiotic gynogenetic reproduction. Forty animals from the ninth successive generation of gynogenetic reproduction were analyzed with a low-density SNP (Single Nucleotide Polymorphism) panel. All individuals were observed to be homozygous for identical alleles at all SNPs, therefore indicating that the established mitotic gynogenetic line is composed of 100% clonal individuals.
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