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December 6, 2023

Scientists develop 'sexy_markers,' a bioinformatics tool that reveals white shark gender

Great white shark at Isla Guadalupe, Mexico, August 2006. Credit: Terry Goss/Wikipedia
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Great white shark at Isla Guadalupe, Mexico, August 2006. Credit: Terry Goss/Wikipedia

A new study led by CSIRO, Australia's national science agency, has revealed white shark gender is determined by X and Y sex chromosomes.

The researchers developed a robust method to find sex chromosomes in a shark's genome and a new PCR test that can be used in labs to sex white sharks from tissue biopsies.

Dr. Floriaan Devloo-Delva, postdoctoral research fellow at CSIRO's Australian National Fish Collection, said the team developed a bioinformatics tool named "sexy_markers" that uses a statistical method to search DNA data for sex chromosomes.

The team then used sexy_markers to search for sex chromosomes in a large sample of white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias). The work is in the journal Conservation Genetics Resources.

"We discovered that in the is driven by genetics, not by temperature like in or turtles," Dr. Devloo-Delva said.

"Our study showed that the white shark has X and Y sex chromosomes. Males are XY and females are XX."

Sex determination varies widely across the and can involve genes on sex chromosomes, egg incubation temperature or even the proportion of males and females in a population.

Some shark species are known to have sex chromosomes but the behind sex determination in sharks is largely unknown. To date, have been examined in only 94 shark and ray species (
"This knowledge reveals more about the biology and population ecology of white sharks, and will help management agencies better understand the species," Dr. Devloo-Delva said.

White sharks are listed as "vulnerable" on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List.

"This new test will be useful for sex identification of juvenile sharks without developed external sex organs for population monitoring and conservation, or using samples obtained from processed carcasses in fisheries or the fin trade," Dr. Devloo-Delva said.

More information: Floriaan Devloo-Delva et al, An R-based tool for identifying sex-linked markers from restriction site-associated DNA sequencing with applications to elasmobranch conservation, Conservation Genetics Resources (2023).

Provided by CSIRO

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