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Silencing and augmentation of IAG hormone transcripts in adultMacrobrachiumrosenbergiimales affects morphotype transformation
Author(s) -
Himanshu Priyadarshi,
Rekha Das,
Annam PavanKumar,
P. Gireesh-Babu,
Hasan Javed,
Sujit Kumar,
M. Makesh,
Somdutt,
Gopal Krishna,
Aparna Chaudhari
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of experimental biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.367
H-Index - 185
eISSN - 1477-9145
pISSN - 0022-0949
DOI - 10.1242/jeb.163410
Subject(s) - biology , gene knockdown , macrobrachium rosenbergii , andrology , rna interference , medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , endocrinology , gene , rna , genetics , ecology , prawn
Morphotypic differentiation is the external manifestation of dominance hierarchy in Macrobrachium rosenbergii The intermediate morphotype orange claw (OC) male exhibits the highest growth rate and is subordinate in hierarchy to blue claw (BC) male while dominant on small male (SM). The present study was undertaken to examine the specific role of insulin-like androgenic gland ( iag ) hormone in morphotype differentiation of M. rosenbergii To achieve this, RNAi mediated knockdown as well as augmentation of iag ranscripts were effected in ∼60 g OC males using plasmid-based constructs pcD-IAG-lh and pcD-IAGorf, respectively. The treatments were administered to animals maintained in isolation as well as in community. The knockdown plasmid construct that expresses iag -specific long hairpin RNA caused 16-fold reduction of iag ranscripts in the SSN1 cell line in vitro When injected into OC males living in a community, 2.3-fold iag knockdown was recorded, while in isolated OC males it was 4.2-fold initially, but returned to normal subsequently. Compared with the respective controls, OC to BC transformations in the iag silenced animals were significantly lower in the community-reared group, while no difference was observed in the isolated animals. It is reported here for the first time tha iag augmentation in OC males resulted in significantly higher OC to BC transformations, when animals were reared in community. This plasmid-based IAG knockdown approach could be developed into a low stress, feed or immersion treatment for controlling heterogeneous individual growth of M. rosenbergii males in aquaculture.

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