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Dive into the research topics where Sho Hosoya is active.

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Featured researches published by Sho Hosoya.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

A trans-species missense SNP in Amhr2 is associated with sex determination in the tiger pufferfish, Takifugu rubripes (fugu).

Takashi Kamiya; Wataru Kai; Satoshi Tasumi; Ayumi Oka; Takayoshi Matsunaga; Naoki Mizuno; Masashi Fujita; Hiroaki Suetake; Shigenori Suzuki; Sho Hosoya; Sumanty Tohari; Sydney Brenner; Toshiaki Miyadai; Byrappa Venkatesh; Yuzuru Suzuki; Kiyoshi Kikuchi

Heterogametic sex chromosomes have evolved independently in various lineages of vertebrates. Such sex chromosome pairs often contain nonrecombining regions, with one of the chromosomes harboring a master sex-determining (SD) gene. It is hypothesized that these sex chromosomes evolved from a pair of autosomes that diverged after acquiring the SD gene. By linkage and association mapping of the SD locus in fugu (Takifugu rubripes), we show that a SNP (C/G) in the anti-Müllerian hormone receptor type II (Amhr2) gene is the only polymorphism associated with phenotypic sex. This SNP changes an amino acid (His/Asp384) in the kinase domain. While females are homozygous (His/His384), males are heterozygous. Sex in fugu is most likely determined by a combination of the two alleles of Amhr2. Consistent with this model, the medaka hotei mutant carrying a substitution in the kinase domain of Amhr2 causes a female phenotype. The association of the Amhr2 SNP with phenotypic sex is conserved in two other species of Takifugu but not in Tetraodon. The fugu SD locus shows no sign of recombination suppression between X and Y chromosomes. Thus, fugu sex chromosomes represent an unusual example of proto–sex chromosomes. Such undifferentiated X-Y chromosomes may be more common in vertebrates than previously thought.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2011

Integration of the Genetic Map and Genome Assembly of Fugu Facilitates Insights into Distinct Features of Genome Evolution in Teleosts and Mammals

Wataru Kai; Kiyoshi Kikuchi; Sumanty Tohari; Ah Keng Chew; Alice Tay; Atushi Fujiwara; Sho Hosoya; Hiroaki Suetake; Kiyoshi Naruse; Sydney Brenner; Yuzuru Suzuki; Byrappa Venkatesh

Abstract The compact genome of fugu (Takifugu rubripes) has been used widely as a reference genome for understanding the evolution of vertebrate genomes. However, the fragmented nature of the fugu genome assembly has restricted its use for comparisons of genome architecture in vertebrates. To extend the contiguity of the assembly to the chromosomal level, we have generated a comprehensive genetic map of fugu and anchored the scaffolds of the assembly to the 22 chromosomes of fugu. The map consists of 1,220 microsatellite markers that provide anchor points to 697 scaffolds covering 86% of the genome assembly (http://www.fugu-sg.org/). The integrated genome map revealed a higher recombination rate in fugu compared with other vertebrates and a wide variation in the recombination rate between sexes and across chromosomes of fugu. We used the extended assembly to explore recent rearrangement events in the lineages of fugu, Tetraodon, and medaka and compared them with rearrangements in three mammalian (human, mouse, and opossum) lineages. Between the two pufferfishes, fugu has experienced fewer chromosomal rearrangements than Tetraodon. The gene order is more highly conserved in the three teleosts than in mammals largely due to a lower rate of interchromosomal rearrangements in the teleosts. These results provide new insights into the distinct patterns of genome evolution between teleosts and mammals. The consolidated genome map and the genetic map of fugu are valuable resources for comparative genomics of vertebrates and for elucidating the genetic basis of the phenotypic diversity of ∼25 species of Takifugu that evolved within the last 5 My.


Fisheries Science | 2008

Individual variations in behavior and free cortisol responses to acute stress in tiger pufferfish Takifugu rubripes

Sho Hosoya; Tokyoji Kaneko; Yuzuru Suzuki; Akinori Hino

The aim of the present study was for individual variation in behavior to be characterized and related to differences in physiological stress responses in juvenile tiger pufferfish (fugu) Takifugu rubripes. A set of siblings (n=330) from wild parents was subjected to behavior tests, and some were classified into active and inactive groups (n=42 each group). The active animals consisted of those individuals that kept active swimming during 6 min after transfer from one tank to another, and the inactive animals were those that stopped swimming within 6 min. Time-course acute stress responses, which were elicited by anesthesia and subsequent removal of a pectoral fin, were compared between the active and inactive fish. The stress indicators used were free and total plasma cortisol, and plasma glucose. Although no significant difference was observed at each sampling point between groups, the inactive fish required shorter recovery time from acute stress in all three indicators than the active fish. The percentage of free to total plasma cortisol in the pre-stress condition was significantly lower in the inactive group than in the active group. Our findings indicate that fugu has behavioral variation that is associated with stress responsiveness. The inactive fish are expected to be more tolerant of stress and suitable for aquaculture.


Evolution | 2013

THE GENETIC ARCHITECTURE OF GROWTH RATE IN JUVENILE TAKIFUGU SPECIES

Sho Hosoya; Wataru Kai; Masashi Fujita; Kadoo Miyaki; Hiroaki Suetake; Yuzuru Suzuki; Kiyoshi Kikuchi

Closely related species have often evolved dramatic differences in body size. Takifugu rubripes (fugu) is a large marine pufferfish whose genome has been sequenced, whereas T. niphobles is the smallest species among Takifugu. We show that, unsurprisingly, the juvenile growth rate of T. rubripes is higher than that of T. niphobles in a laboratory setting. We produced F2 progenies of their F1 hybrids and found one quantitative trait locus (QTL) significantly associated with variation in juvenile body size. This QTL region (3.5 Mb) contains no known genes directly related to growth phenotype (such as IGFs) except Fgf21, which inhibits growth hormone signaling in mouse. The QTL in Takifugu spp. is distinct from the region previously known to control body size variations in stickleback or tilapia. Our results suggest that in the fish tested herein, genomic regions underlying body size evolution might have different genetic origins. They also suggest that many diverse traits in Takifugu spp. are amenable to genetic mapping.


International Journal for Parasitology | 2013

Genomic regions of pufferfishes responsible for host specificity of a monogenean parasite, Heterobothrium okamotoi.

Sho Hosoya; Shinichi Kido; Yo Hirabayashi; Wataru Kai; Ryuhei Kinami; Tomoyoshi Yoshinaga; Kazuo Ogawa; Hiroaki Suetake; Kiyoshi Kikuchi; Yuzuru Suzuki

The genetic mechanisms underlying host specificity of parasitic infections are largely unknown. After hatching, the larvae of the monogenean parasite, Heterobothrium okamotoi, attach to the gill filaments of hosts and the post-larval worms develop there by consuming nutrients from the host. The susceptibility to H. okamotoi infection differs markedly among fish species. While this parasite can grow on tiger pufferfish (also called fugu), Takifugu rubripes, it appears to be rejected by a close congener, grass pufferfish, Takifugu niphobles, after initial attachment to the gills. To determine the genetic architecture of the pufferfish responsible for this host specificity, we performed genome-wide quantitative trait loci analysis. We raised second generation (F2) hybrids of the two pufferfish species and experimentally infected them with the monogenean in vivo. To assess possible differences in host mechanisms between early and later periods of infection, we sampled fish three h and 21days after exposure. Genome scanning of fish from the 3h infection trial revealed suggestive quantitative trait loci on linkage groups 2 and 14, which affected the number of parasites on the gill. However, analysis of fish 21days p.i. detected a significant quantitative trait locus on linkage group 9 and three other suggestive quantitative trait loci on linkage groups 7, 18 and 22. These results indicated the polygenic nature of the host mechanisms involved in the infection/rejection of H. okamotoi. Moreover the analyses suggested that host factors may play a more important role during the growth period of the parasite than during initial host recognition at the time of attachment. Within the 95% confidence interval of the linkage group 9 quantitative trait locus in the fugu genome, there were 214 annotated protein-coding genes, including immunity-related genes such as Irak4, Muc2 and Muc5ac.


Journal of Immunology | 2017

Mucosal IgM Antibody with d-Mannose Affinity in Fugu Takifugu rubripes Is Utilized by a Monogenean Parasite Heterobothrium okamotoi for Host Recognition

Kento Igarashi; Ryohei Matsunaga; Sachi Hirakawa; Sho Hosoya; Hiroaki Suetake; Kiyoshi Kikuchi; Yuzuru Suzuki; Osamu Nakamura; Toshiaki Miyadai; Satoshi Tasumi; Shigeyuki Tsutsui

How parasites recognize their definitive hosts is a mystery; however, parasitism is reportedly initiated by recognition of certain molecules on host surfaces. Fish ectoparasites make initial contact with their hosts at body surfaces, such as skin and gills, which are covered with mucosa that are similar to those of mammalian guts. Fish are among the most primitive vertebrates with immune systems that are equivalent to those in mammals, and they produce and secrete IgM into mucus. In this study, we showed that the monogenean parasite Heterobothrium okamotoi utilizes IgM to recognize its host, fugu Takifugu rubripes. Oncomiracidia are infective larvae of H. okamotoi that shed their cilia and metamorphose into juveniles when exposed to purified d-mannose–binding fractions from fugu mucus. Using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry analysis, proteins contained in the fraction were identified as d-mannose–specific IgM with two d-mannose–binding lectins. However, although deciliation was significantly induced by IgM and was inhibited by d-mannose or a specific Ab against fugu IgM, other lectins had no effect, and IgM without d-mannose affinity induced deciliation to a limited degree. Subsequent immunofluorescent staining experiments showed that fugu d-mannose–specific IgM binds ciliated epidermal cells of oncomiracidium. These observations suggest that deciliation is triggered by binding of fugu IgM to cell surface Ags via Ag binding sites. Moreover, concentrations of d-mannose–binding IgM in gill mucus were sufficient to induce deciliation in vitro, indicating that H. okamotoi parasites initially use host Abs to colonize host gills.


Behavior Genetics | 2015

Genetic Basis Underlying Behavioral Correlation Between Fugu Takifugu rubripes and a Closely Related Species, Takifugu niphobles

Sho Hosoya; Hiroaki Suetake; Yuzuru Suzuki; Kiyoshi Kikuchi

Correlated suits of behaviors (behavioral syndrome) are commonly observed in both inter- and intraspecific studies. In order to understand the genetic basis of such a correlation between species, we compared ten behaviors classified into five categories (acclimation, feeding, normal swimming, reaction to a novel object and activity in a novel environment) between two pufferfish species, Takifugu rubripes and T. niphobles. The two species showed consistent differences in nine behaviors with a significant correlation among behaviors. Quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis using second generation hybrids revealed that different sets of small effect QTL are associated with the observed interspecific behavioral disparity. This indicates that correlations in temperament traits between them are governed by many genes with small effects, and each behavior has been selected to form particular combination patterns. One of the QTL showing small pleiotropic effect includes the Drd4 gene known for its association with behavioral traits in some animal taxa including mammals.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Identification of the sex-determining locus in grass puffer (Takifugu niphobles) provides evidence for sex-chromosome turnover in a subset of Takifugu species

Risa Ieda; Sho Hosoya; Shota Tajima; Kazufumi Atsumi; Takashi Kamiya; Aoi Nozawa; Yuma Aoki; Satoshi Tasumi; Takashi Koyama; Osamu Nakamura; Yuzuru Suzuki; Kiyoshi Kikuchi; Matthias Stöck

There is increasing evidence for frequent turnover in sex chromosomes in vertebrates. Yet experimental systems suitable for tracing the detailed process of turnover are rare. In theory, homologous turnover is possible if the new sex-determining locus is established on the existing sex-chromosome. However, there is no empirical evidence for such an event. The genus Takifugu includes fugu (Takifugu rubripes) and its two closely-related species whose sex is most likely determined by a SNP at the Amhr2 locus. In these species, males are heterozygous, with G and C alleles at the SNP site, while females are homozygous for the C allele. To determine if a shift in the sex-determining locus occurred in another member of this genus, we used genetic mapping to characterize the sex-chromosome systems of Takifugu niphobles. We found that the G allele of Amhr2 is absent in T. niphobles. Nevertheless, our initial mapping suggests a linkage between the phenotypic sex and the chromosome 19, which harbors the Amhr2 locus. Subsequent high-resolution analysis using a sex-reversed fish demonstrated that the sex-determining locus maps to the proximal end of chromosome 19, far from the Amhr2 locus. Thus, it is likely that homologous turnover involving these species has occurred. The data also showed that there is a male-specific reduction of recombination around the sex-determining locus. Nevertheless, no evidence for sex-chromosome differentiation was detected: the reduced recombination depended on phenotypic sex rather than genotypic sex; no X- or Y-specific maker was obtained; the YY individual was viable. Furthermore, fine-scale mapping narrowed down the new sex-determining locus to the interval corresponding to approximately 300-kb of sequence in the fugu genome. Thus, T. niphobles is determined to have a young and small sex-determining region that is suitable for studying an early phase of sex-chromosome evolution and the mechanisms underlying turnover of sex chromosome.


BMC Research Notes | 2018

Assessment of genetic diversity in Coho salmon ( Oncorhynchus kisutch ) populations with no family records using ddRAD-seq

Sho Hosoya; Kiyoshi Kikuchi; Hiroshi Nagashima; Junichi Onodera; Kouichi Sugimoto; Kou Satoh; Keisuke Matsuzaki; Masaki Yasugi; Atsushi J. Nagano; Akira Kumagayi; Kenichi Ueda; Tadahide Kurokawa

ObjectiveSelective breeding for desirable traits is becoming popular in aquaculture. In Miyagi prefecture, Japan, a selectively bred population of Coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) has been established with the original, randomly breeding population maintained separately. Since they have been bred without family records, the genetic diversity within these populations remains unknown. In this study, we estimated the genetic diversity and key quantitative genetic parameters such as heritability and genomic breeding value for body size traits by means of genomic best linear unbiased prediction to assess the genetic health of these populations.ResultsNinety-nine and 83 females from the selective and random groups, respectively, were genotyped at 2350 putative SNPs by means of double digest restriction associated DNA sequencing. The genetic diversity in the selectively bred group was low, as were the estimated heritability and prediction accuracy for length and weight (h2 = 0.26–0.28; accuracy = 0.34), compared to the randomly bred group (h2 = 0.50–0.60; accuracy = 0.51–0.54). Although the tested sample size was small, these results suggest that further selection is difficult for the selectively bred population, while there is some potential for the randomly bred group, especially with the aid of genomic information.


Fish & Shellfish Immunology | 2008

Cortisol response and immune-related effects of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar Linnaeus) subjected to short- and long-term stress

Mark D. Fast; Sho Hosoya; Stewart C. Johnson; Luis O.B. Afonso

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Hiroaki Suetake

Fukui Prefectural University

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Toshiaki Miyadai

Fukui Prefectural University

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