Pieau, C., Girondot, M., Richard-Mercier, N., Desvages, G., Dorizzi, M., and Zaborski, P. 1994a. Temperature sensitivity of sexual differentiation of gonads in the European pond turtle: hormonal involvement. J. Exp. Zool., special issue. 269,In press.Abstract
In the European pond turtle, the incubation of eggs below 28šC yields 100% phenotypic males, whereas above 29.5šC lOO% phenotypic females are obtained. Many data argue in favor of the involvement of steroid hormones in this phenomenon. During the thermosensitive period for sex determination, gonads are able to metabolize different steroid precursors, such as pregnenolone, progesterone, androstenedione, and dehydroepiandrosterone. Gonadal ¦strogen content is higher at 30šC than at 25šC. When ¦stradiol benzoate (5 to 50µg) or ¦strone (100 µg) are injected into eggs incubated at 25šC before or at the beginning of the thermosensitive period, gonads differentiate into ovaries instead of testes: an ovan ovarian-cortex develops whereas medullary testicular cords are inhibited. Conversely, when tamoxifen (an anti¦strogen) is injected into eggs incubated at 30šC, medullary testicular cords (or tubes) differentiate. Gonadal aromatase activity during the thermosensitive period increases in an exponential fashion at 30šC, and remains very low at 25šC. When eggs are first incubated at 25šC up to a stage within this period, and then shifted to 35šC (a highly feminizing temperature) for different times, the response is also exponential, showing an amplification of aromatase synthesis. Temperature could act, directly or indirectly, on the regulation of the expression of the aromatase gene. The anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH) exerts an inhibitory effect on aromatase activity. The termination of the thermosensitive period could result in testes from an active synthesis of AMH, and in ovaries from high levels of ¦strogens.