转基因和野生型日本medaka鱼适应度差异基因流的全生命周期评估

Environmental biosafety research Pub Date : 2010-01-01 Epub Date: 2010-10-22 DOI:10.1051/ebr/2010005
Kelly M Pennington, Anne R Kapuscinski, Michael S Morton, Anne M Cooper, Loren M Miller
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引用次数: 7

摘要

正在开发用于水产养殖的转基因鱼可以逃离养殖场,与附近环境中的野生近缘种杂交。预测逃逸是否会导致转基因渗入是评估转基因鱼环境风险的主要挑战。以往的研究利用适合度性状的数学模型模拟转基因鱼的基因流动,以预测转基因基因型的相对选择值。在此,我们首次对转基因动物公开繁殖种群的整个生命周期的基因流动进行了研究,并对适应度性状进行了测量。我们进行了两次入侵实验,将两种生长增强的转基因鱼(T67和T400),日本medaka (Oryzias latipes)释放到结构中胚层的野生型(W) medaka群体中。几代后,在第一次入侵实验(6个月)中,转基因鱼的频率在不同的重复中出现变化,但在第二次入侵实验(19个月)中,转基因鱼的频率下降。我们还测量了转基因和野生型medaka的选择适应度性状,因为这些性状可以用来预测基因型的相对选择值。结果表明:T400雄性比W雄性更有生育能力;W母鼠的后代比转基因母鼠的后代寿命更长;W和T67比T400更早达到性成熟。与其他报道较大转基因雄性具有交配优势的研究相比,我们发现W雄性比T雄性获得更多的雌性交配;遗传背景效应可能解释了我们在比较来自不同品系的W和T鱼时得出的不同结果。在第二次入侵实验中,转基因鱼出现频率下降,说明转基因鱼在实验环境中具有选择性劣势。我们发现一些适应度性状的转基因优势和其他野生型优势与我们的入侵实验结果一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Full life-cycle assessment of gene flow consistent with fitness differences in transgenic and wild-type Japanese medaka fish (Oryzias latipes).

Transgenic fish in development for aquaculture could escape from farms and interbreed with wild relatives in the nearby environment. Predicting whether escapes would result in transgene introgression is a major challenge in assessing environmental risks of transgenic fish. Previous studies have simulated gene flow from transgenic fish using mathematical modeling of fitness traits to predict the relative selective value of transgenic genotypes. Here, we present the first study of gene flow over the full life cycle in openly-breeding populations of transgenic animals, along with measurement of fitness traits. We conducted two invasion experiments in which we released two lines of growth-enhanced transgenic fish (T67 and T400), Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes), into populations of wild-type (W) medaka in structured mesocosms. After several generations, the frequency of transgenic fish varied across replicates in the first invasion experiment (6 months), but the frequency of transgenic fish decreased in the second experiment (19 months). We also measured selected fitness traits in transgenic and wild-type medaka because these traits could be used to predict the relative selective value of a genotype. We found that: T400 males were more fertile than W males; offspring of W females lived longer than those with transgenic mothers; and W and T67 females reached sexual maturity sooner than T400 females. In contrast with other research that reported larger transgenic males had a mating advantage, we found that W males obtained more matings with females than T males; genetic background effects may account for our differing results as we compared W and T fish derived from different strains. The decreasing frequency of transgenic fish in the second invasion experiment suggests that transgenic fish had a selective disadvantage in the experimental environment. Our finding of transgenic advantage of some fitness traits and wild-type advantage in others is consistent with our invasion experiment results.

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