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Seminal Plasma Exosomes: Promising Biomarkers for Identification of Male and Pseudo-Males in Cynoglossus semilaevis.

Marine Biotechnology 2019 March 13
In mammals, small RNAs enclosed in exosomes have been identified as appropriate signatures for disease diagnosis. However, there is limited information on exosomes derived from seminal plasma, and few studies have reported analyzed the composition of exosomes and enclosed small RNAs in fish. The half-smooth tongue sole (Cynoglossus semilaevis) is an economically important fish for aquaculture, and it exhibits sexual dimorphism: the female gender show higher growth rates and larger body sizes than males. Standard karyotype analysis and artificial gynogenesis tests have revealed that this species uses heterogametic sex determination (ZW/ZZ), and so-called sex-reversed pseudo-males exist. In this study, we successfully identified exosomes in the seminal plasma of C. semilaevis; to the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of exosomes in fish seminal plasma. Analysis of the nucleotide composition showed that miRNAs were dominant in the exosomes, and the miRNAs were sequenced and compared to identify signature miRNAs as sexual biomarkers. Moreover, target genes of the signature miRNAs were predicted by sequence matching and annotation. Finally, four miRNAs (dre-miR-141-3P, dre-miR-10d-5p, ssa-miR-27b-3p, and ssa-miR-23a-3p) with significant differential expression in the males and pseudo-males were selected from the signature candidate miRNAs as markers for sex identification, and their expression profiles were verified using real-time quantitative PCR. Our findings could provide an effective detection method for sex differentiation in fish.

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