by Laurel
Hamers, Science News, 6/14/17
When
things get hot, embryonic bearded dragon lizards turn female — and now
scientists might know why. New analyses, reported online June 14 in Science
Advances, reveal that temperature-induced
changes in RNA’s protein-making instructions might set off this sex switch. The
findings might also apply to other reptile species whose sex is influenced by
temperature.
Unlike
most mammals, many species of reptiles and fish don’t have sex chromosomes.
Instead, they develop into males at certain temperatures and females at others.
Bearded
dragon lizards are an unusual case because chromosome combinations and
temperature are known to influence sex determination, says ecologist Clare
Holleley of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in
Canberra, Australia (SN:
7/25/15, p.7). When eggs are incubated below 32° Celsius, embryonic
bearded dragons with two Z chromosomes develop as male, while dragons with a Z
and a W chromosome develop as female. But as temperatures creep above 32°,
chromosomally male ZZ dragons will reverse course and develop as females
instead.
“They have
two sex chromosomes, but they also have this temperature override,” Holleley
says.
By
comparing bearded dragons that are female because of their chromosomes and
those that are female because of environmental influences, Holleley and her
colleagues hoped to sort out genetic differences that might point to how the
lizards make the switch. The team collected RNA from the brain, reproductive
organs and other tissues of normal female, normal male and sex-reversed female
Australian central bearded dragons (Pogona vitticeps). Then, the researchers
compared that RNA, looking for differences in the ways the lizards were turning
on genes.
Sex-reversed
females turned up the activity of several genes, the researchers found. Two,
JARID2 and JMJD3, are part of a family of genes called the Jumonji family,
which are known to influence sex differentiation in other animals. For
instance, in mammals, a Jumonji gene interacts with SRY, a gene on the Y
chromosome that sets off testes development in males. Another is involved in X
chromosome inactivation, which ensures that females don’t get a double dose of
proteins made by genes housed on their pair of X chromosomes.
The
researchers also found changes in the lizard’s RNA. During a cursory skim
through the RNA data for JARID2 and JMJD3, study coauthor Ira Deveson noticed
something strange. RNA carries information from DNA that gets translated in
proteins, and normally it gets edited before translation — certain sections get
taken out. But in sex-reversed females, one of the sections normally removed
remained.
The
observation “was kind of fortuitous,” says Deveson, a biologist at the Garvan
Institute of Medical Research in Sydney.
Through
closer investigation, he found that the RNA sections that stuck around
contained chemical codes that act as stop signs, prematurely halting the
translation of the RNA from these two genes into proteins.
It’s not
clear whether the different RNA means a protein doesn’t get made at all in
dragons incubated at high temperatures or whether the proteins made are
modified, smaller versions of their usual selves. That’s a target for future
research, says Holleley.
Either
way, previous studies have shown that proteins made from Jumonji genes work to
control many other genes that orchestrate developmental processes — and that
environmental stress, such as from heat, can change the way these genes turn on
and off.
Heat
messes with the proteins made from JARID2 and JMJD3, which in turn mess with
the proteins made by other sex-related genes, the researchers propose. Sex in
bearded dragons is determined by amounts of certain proteins — males, with two
Z chromosomes, typically get a double dose of anything coded on the Z
chromosome. So such a disruption could flip the sex from male to female.
“The data
are tantalizing,” says Turk Rhen, a biologist at the University of North Dakota
in Grand Forks who wasn’t part of the study. But, he says, the researchers
looked at RNA from only adult bearded dragons. Studying embryonic dragons is
important for piecing together gene activity during sex determination.
Holleley
and Deveson did find similar effects in embryonic sex-reversed embryonic
alligators and turtles. That suggests that RNA editing differences might start
early in development, and might extend to other reptiles who use temperature
(hot or cold) as a sex-determining cue. In the future, the team hopes to
investigate embryonic dragons as well, snipping out the JARID2 and JMJD3 genes
from their DNA and tracking what happens as the dragons develop.
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