Consequences of Cancer on Zebrafish Danio rerio: Insights into Sex Determination, Sex Ratio, and Offspring Survival.

Author:

Boutry Justine1,Douhard Mathieu2,Asselin Klara1,Dujon Antoine M1,Meliani Jordan1,De Backer Olivier3,Nicolas Delphine4,Shultz Aaron G5,Biro Peter A5,Beckmann Christa5,Fontenille Laura6,Kissa Karima7,Ujvari Beata5,Thomas Frederic1

Affiliation:

1. CREEC/CANECEV (CREES), MIVEGEC, Unité Mixte de Recherches, IRD 224–CNRS 5290

2. Biometry and Evolutionary Biology Laboratory

3. Unité de Recherche en Physiologie Moléculaire, Namur Research Institute for Life Sciences

4. Tour du Valat

5. School of Life and Environmental Sciences

6. AZELEAD

7. VBIC, INSERM U1047

Abstract

Abstract Offspring sex ratio has been proposed as an indicator of the risk of developing certain cancers in humans, but offspring sex ratio may also be a consequence of the disease. In this study, we investigate this subject using the zebrafish, Danio rerio, as a model system. First, we explore whether inducing skin cancer at an early stage of the host's life (embryonic stage) has the potential to influence sex determination and/or sex-specific mortality. Second, we investigate whether the sex ratio in offspring produced by tumor-bearing adult females differs from that of healthy females. Third, we compare the survival (until sexual maturity) of offspring produced by cancerous and non-cancerous females. We found that skin cancer did not influence sex determination and sex ratio of the offspring. However, consistent with previous studies on other model systems, the survival of offspring was higher when mothers were cancerous, suggesting that diseased females allocate more resources to current reproductive efforts compared to their healthy counterparts. This study makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the ecological and evolutionary consequences of host-tumor interactions in animals.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference74 articles.

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2. Linking pollution and cancer in aquatic environments: A review;Baines C,2021a

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4. Bambino K, Chu J. 2017. Zebrafish in Toxicology and Environmental Health. Current Topics in Developmental Biology, vol. 124.

5. Bartoń K. 2023. MuMIn: Multi-Model Inference.

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