Introduction

During generation of haploid gametes, entry into meiosis exhibits a distinct sex-specific difference in timing, with female gametes being generated during late fetal development and male gametes being generated postnatally at puberty1. Entry into meiosis was proposed to be an intrinsic property of fetal germ cells, unless prevented by a meiosis-inhibiting factor produced in the fetal testis but not fetal ovary2. Recent findings demonstrated that supraphysiological levels of retinoic acid (RA) can stimulate premature meiosis in fetal testis3,4. Also, investigation of Cyp26b1-null mutant mice demonstrated that the P450 enzyme Cyp26b1, normally expressed in Sertoli cells of fetal testis but not ovary, is required for delayed entry into meiosis in male mice4,5,6. As Cyp26b1 is known to degrade RA7, this suggested a role for RA as a sex-specific inducer of meiosis. During embryonic development, RA functions mainly in a paracrine manner, with RA synthesis being controlled mostly by tissue-specific expression of retinaldehyde dehydrogenase-2 (Raldh2), which generates RA that travels to RA target cells where it directly regulates genes via ubiquitous nuclear RA receptors (RARs) bound to RA response elements (RAREs)8. Expression of Raldh2 (Aldh1a2) in the mesonephros was reported to serve as a paracrine source of RA for the adjacent gonad, which does not express Raldh2 (ref. 4). Stra8 is a premeiotic gene required for meiotic initiation that is normally expressed only in ovaries during embryogenesis9. Stra8 can be prematurely induced in testis by treatment with high levels of RA, whereas treatment of ovaries with RALDH2 inhibitors or RAR antagonists results in downregulation of Stra8 expression3,4. These findings generated a new model for sex-specific timing of meiosis entry, in which RA generated in the mesonephros serves as an extrinsic inducer of Stra8 in the adjacent gonad unless degraded by Cyp26b1 (ref. 10).

In order to ascertain whether endogenous RA normally has a role during induction of meiosis, we investigated Raldh2−/− mouse embryos lacking RA synthesis. In this study, we show that RA signalling is not required for induction of Stra8 expression in the fetal ovary. We also demonstrate that the critical role Cyp26b1 has in preventing onset of meiosis in the fetal testis does not involve degradation of RA, suggesting an RA-independent function of Cyp26b1 in control of meiotic initiation.

Results

Stra8 is unaffected by loss of RA synthesis in the fetal ovary

Loss of endogenous RA synthesis in Raldh2−/− mouse embryos results in the cessation of growth after E8.5 and death soon after11,12. Low-dose maternal dietary RA supplementation of Raldh2−/− embryos carried out for a limited time from E6.75 to E9.25 provides less RA than is normally produced by RALDH2 (ref. 13); however, this treatment rescues early lethality and allows the study of RA function in tissues of older embryos that normally exhibit RA activity but now lack such activity14,15. As RA administered to embryos is completely cleared within 12–24 h11, tissues that require RALDH2 for their endogenous RA will lack RA activity from at least E10.25 onwards using a treatment regimen ending at E9.25. In the studies reported here, RA treatment of Raldh2−/− embryos ended 3 days before initiation of Stra8 expression in the ovary, which occurs at E12.5 (ref. 16). We observed that Raldh2−/− embryos rescued in this manner did not exhibit a loss or reduction of Stra8 expression in E13.5 fetal ovaries (Fig. 1a–d). Although Raldh2 is primarily responsible for RA synthesis throughout the mesonephros, Raldh3 (Aldh1a3) is expressed at E10.5 in a limited region of the mesonephric duct that gives rise to the ureteric buds of the kidney14. Therefore, we also examined ovaries from E13.5 Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− double-mutant embryos (rescued as described above), and found that Stra8 expression still remained robust and was comparable with wild-type or rescued Raldh2−/− single-mutant ovaries (Fig. 1e,f). Sections of single- and double-mutant E13.5 ovaries revealed no reduction in Stra8 expression relative to wild-type (Fig. 1b,d,f).

Figure 1: Genetic loss of RA synthesis does not affect Stra8 expression in fetal ovary.
figure 1

Stra8 mRNA was detected in gonads by whole-mount in situ hybridization. (af) E13.5 ovary/mesonephros; (a) wild-type whole-mount, (b) wild-type vibratome section, (c) Raldh2−/− whole-mount, (d) Raldh2−/− vibratome section, (e) Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− whole-mount (f) Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− vibratome section. (g, h) E12.0 ovary/mesonephros. (i, j) E12.5 ovary/mesonephros. (k, l) E14.5 ovary/mesonephros. (mo) E13.5 testis/mesonephros. Meso, mesonephros; ov, ovary; tes, testis. n=3 for all wild-type (WT) and Raldh2−/− (R2−/−) specimens; n=2 for all Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− (R2−/−;R3−/−) specimens; scale bar, 200 μm.

We also examined Stra8 expression at additional time points, as it has been reported that expression normally initiates at E12.5 (ref. 16). Stra8 expression was not observed in either wild-type or Raldh2−/− mutant ovaries at E12.0, verifying that RA-rescued mutants treated with a low dose of RA until E9.25 do not exhibit premature induction of Stra8 (Fig. 1g,h); our previous studies using the same regimen for generating RA-rescued Raldh2 mutants have shown that following low-dose RA treatment ending at E9.25, the mutants are clearly RA deficient by at least E12.5, as RA activity normally present in the interdigital mesenchyme is completely missing and forelimbs are stunted15. At E12.5, weak Stra8 expression was observed (Fig. 1i,j) and at E14.5 much stronger Stra8 expression was observed (Fig. 1k,l), thus demonstrating that Raldh2−/− mutant ovaries exhibit normal induction and maintenance of Stra8 expression. Thus, in contrast to previously reported RA inhibitor and antagonist studies3,4, our genetic experiments reveal that the enzymes synthesizing RA in the vicinity of the ovary are not required for Stra8 expression in the ovary.

Previous studies have demonstrated that E13.5 testes lack Stra8 expression due to expression of Cyp26b1 (refs 3,43, 4). We observed no Stra8 expression in E13.5 wild-type testis and this was unchanged in Raldh2−/− or Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− testis demonstrating that RA is not required to repress male Stra8 expression at this stage (Fig. 1m–o).

RA is not required for induction of meiosis

In order to determine whether RA signalling is required for the initiation of meiosis, we examined E13.5 wild-type and Raldh2−/− ovaries for expression of Scp3 encoding a synaptonemal complex protein expressed during meiotic prophase17. Whole-mount in situ hybridization demonstrated similar expression of Scp3 in wild-type and Raldh2−/− ovaries (Fig. 2a,b). To confirm our observation that RA is not required for meiotic initiation in embryonic ovary, we examined E13.5 wild-type and Raldh2−/− ovaries for the presence of phosphorylated H2AX (γ-H2AX), a histone H2A isoform, which is phosphorylated in response to DNA double-strand breaks in the cell during meiotic recombination9,18. Immunostaining for γ-H2AX demonstrated a similar distribution of DNA double-strand breaks throughout both wild-type and Raldh2−/− ovaries, indicating that germ cells in Raldh2−/− ovaries are engaged in meiotic recombination (Fig. 2c,d); wild-type testis was negative for γ-H2AX immunostaining (Fig. 2e). In addition, analysis of DAPI-stained nuclei demonstrated that E14.5 wild-type and Raldh2−/− ovaries both exhibit germ cells with condensed nuclei characteristic of meiotic prophase (Fig. 2f,g). Together, these findings provide evidence that RA is not required for induction of meiosis during ovary development.

Figure 2: Germ cells in Raldh2 mutant ovary undergo meiosis.
figure 2

(a, b) Expression of Scp3 in E13.5 wild-type and Raldh2−/− ovaries examined by whole-mount in situ hybridization; scale bar, 200 μm. (ce) Immunostaining for γ-H2AX in E13.5 ovary (c, d) and testis (e); arrows indicate female germ cells positive for γ-H2AX detection; scale bar, 10 μm. (f, g). Confocal images of nuclei stained with DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) in E14.5 wild-type and Raldh2−/− ovaries; arrows indicate representative germs cells in meiotic prophase; scale bar, 10 μm. Meso, mesonephros; ov, ovary. n=3 for each specimen.

Raldh mutants lack RA activity in mesonephros/gonad

Examination of E12.0 and E13.5 wild-type and Raldh2−/− embryos carrying the RARE-lacZ RA-reporter transgene19 revealed that RA activity typically observed throughout the wild-type mesonephros was totally eliminated in the mutant, while no RA activity was detected in either wild-type or mutant ovaries (Fig. 3a–d). Thus, the RA rescue treatment for Raldh2−/− embryos does not result in RA activity in the mesonephros/ovary at E12.0, which is prior to the time when Stra8 expression normally initiates. Kidneys from E13.5 Raldh2−/− embryos were smaller than wild type and retained some RA activity (presumably due to Raldh3 expression in the ureteric buds), providing further verification that mutants were carrying the RARE-lacZ transgene (Fig. 3c,d). As an independent test of RA activity, we performed tissue explant RA bioassays20, in which ovary or mesonephros tissues were dissected from E13.5 wild-type, Raldh2−/− and Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/−embryos and cultured on a monolayer of F9 RA-reporter cells (incorporating a RARE-lacZ transgene). The results of this experiment were consistent with our in vivo RARE-lacZ expression data, confirming that only wild-type mesonephros possesses RA activity, whereas single/double-mutant mesonephros and either wild-type or single/double-mutant ovaries completely lack RA activity (Fig. 3e). Together with our Stra8 expression data, these findings show that the mesonephros and ovary from Raldh2−/− and Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− embryos are devoid of any RA signalling, thus demonstrating that Stra8 expression in the ovary does not require RA signalling.

Figure 3: Mesonephros and gonads of Raldh mutants exhibit no RA signalling activity.
figure 3

Detection of RA activity in embryonic ovary/mesonephros. (a, b) RARE-lacZ expression in E12.0 mesonephros/ovary of wild-type (WT) and Raldh2−/− (R2−/−) embryos; n=2; scale bar, 200 μm. (c, d) RARE-lacZ expression in E13.5 mesonephros/ovary; staining in kidney from the same embryo verifies that the embryo carries RARE-lacZ; n=3; scale bar, 200 μm. (e) Detection of RA activity by culturing E13.5 ovary and mesonephros tissues from WT, Raldh2−/− and Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− embryos on a monolayer of F9 RA-reporter cells followed by staining for β-galactosidase activity; this experiment was performed using multiple tissue fragments in duplicate experiments with similar results as shown here; scale bar, 50 μm. k, kidney; meso, mesonephros; ov, ovary.

RARE-lacZ as a sensitive indicator of RA in ovary

Our findings above suggest that Stra8 does not require RA for expression in the ovary, as this organ normally has no RA activity detectable by RARE-lacZ. We performed studies to determine if the RARE-lacZ transgene is able to detect physiological levels of RA in the ovary by culturing wild-type ovaries in the absence or presence of physiological levels of RA. Previous high-performance liquid chromatography measurements have shown that physiological RA concentrations in various regions of E13.5 mouse embryos range from 10 to 40 nM (except 100 nM in spinal cord), with the combined visceral organs having 30 nM21; also, high-performance liquid chromatography studies on whole E10.5 embryos revealed a concentration 25 nM13. Thus, ovaries were treated with physiological amounts of RA from 25 to 100 nM. Ovaries cultured without RA resulted in no expression of RARE-lacZ in the ovary, but treatment with 25 or 100 nM RA was able to induce RARE-lacZ (Fig. 4a–c). Similar treatment of wild-type testes did not induce RARE-lacZ at either RA concentration presumably due to expression of Cyp26b1 (Fig. 4d–f). As RARE-lacZ was able to be induced in ovary by treatment with as little as 25 nM RA, these findings demonstrate that RARE-lacZ is indeed able to detect physiological levels of RA in the ovary, and that the absence of RARE-lacZ expression in ovary indicates that this organ does not contain enough RA to stimulate RA signalling in vivo. These findings further suggest that RA synthesized in the mesonephros does not travel to the ovary in an amount sufficient to stimulate RA signalling in this tissue.

Figure 4: Validation of RARE-lacZ transgene sensitivity to detect gonadal RA activity.
figure 4

RA activity detected by RARE-lacZ expression in wild-type E13.5 gonads cultured in the absence (control) or presence of a physiological dose of RA (25 or 100 nM). (ac) Ovary/mesonephros. (df) Testis/mesonephros. Meso, mesonephros; ov, ovary; tes, testis. n=4 for each condition; scale bar, 200 μm.

RA-independent function for Cyp26b1 in Stra8 induction

Expression of Stra8 requires a germ cell intrinsic factor encoded by Dazl and an extrinsic factor suggested to be RA22. Fetal testis normally lacks Stra8 expression due to the presence of the P450 enzyme Cyp26b1, and treatment of cultured testis/mesonephros with the P450 inhibitor ketoconazole is conducive for Stra8 expression3,4. As Cyp26b1 has been associated with RA degradation, it was postulated that Cyp26b1 inhibitors permitted diffusion and accumulation of RA from the mesonephros to the testis, to prematurely induce Stra8. In order to explore this possibility, we first observed that the E13.5 Raldh2−/− testis/mesonephros complex completely lacked RA signalling according to RARE-lacZ analysis (Fig. 5a). This finding supports the view that the mesonephros from either sex predominantly uses Raldh2 for RA synthesis. Treatment of cultured E13.5 intact testis/mesonephros complexes with ketoconazole induced Stra8 in wild-type testis as expected, but we also observed equivalent Stra8 induction in Raldh2−/− testis, which lacked a source of RA in the adjacent mesonephros (Fig. 5b). Furthermore, when testes were carefully separated from mesonephros and cultured alone in the presence of ketoconazole, Stra8 was not induced in either wild-type or Raldh2−/− backgrounds (Fig. 5b). Previous studies on ketoconazole-treated testis3 or Cyp26b1−/− testis4 did not examine whether testis RA activity was increased as would have been expected if RA is needed to induce Stra8. Interestingly, we observed that RARE-lacZ RA activity was not detected in E13.5 wild-type testis cultured in the presence of ketoconazole under the same conditions described above that induce Stra8 (Fig. 5c). Thus, RA degradation by Cyp26b1 is not the mechanism preventing RA activity in embryonic testis; perhaps RA is not efficiently transported into the testis from the mesonephros similar to what we observed for ovary (Fig. 4). Together, these findings demonstrate that RA is not required for Stra8 induction in testis, but imply that some other extrinsic signal from the mesonephros is required and Cyp26b1 blocks the action of that signal.

Figure 5: RA-independent induction of Stra8 in Raldh2 mutant testis.
figure 5

(a) Detection of RA activity by analysis of RARE-lacZ expression in testis/mesonephros of E13.5 wild-type (WT) and Raldh2−/− (R2−/−) embryos; n=3. (b) Intact testis/mesonephros complexes or separated testis from E13.5 wild-type (WT) or Raldh2−/− (R2−/−) embryos were cultured in the absence (untreated) or presence of 0.7 μM ketoconazole to inhibit Cyp26b1 activity, then analysed for Stra8 mRNA; similar results were obtained in duplicate experiments. (c) RARE-lacZ staining of wild-type E13.5 testis/mesonephros cultured in the absence (untreated) or presence of 0.7 μM ketoconazole; n=2. Meso, mesonephros; tes, testis; scale bar, 200 μm.

Inefficient recruitment of RARs to Stra8 promoter in ovary

Stra8 was first identified as an RA target gene in experiments involving supraphysiological doses of RA administered to mouse embryonal carcinoma cells23. In addition, Stra8 expression in the testis can be induced by RA treatment, but this requires high levels of exogenous RA that are non-physiological3,4. A 400 bp promoter region upstream of mouse Stra8, containing a DNA sequence at −210 bp resembling a DR2 RARE (direct repeat with 2 bp spacer), has been reported to be sufficient to direct spermatogonia-specific expression of Stra8 in postnatal transgenic mice, although it was not demonstrated that the putative RARE is required for Stra8 expression24. Here, we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) studies to investigate the ability of this putative Stra8 DR2 RARE to recruit any of the three RARs compared with the RARb RARE used to construct RARE-lacZ, that is, a DR5 RARE (direct repeat with 5 bp spacer) located at −53 bp in the mouse RARb promoter, which is known to be induced by RA in vivo to increase RARs as part of the RA signalling response25. ChIP performed on E13.5 fetal ovary/mesonephros tissue demonstrated that the putative Stra8 RARE exhibits no detectable binding to RARα, and a relatively low level of binding to RARβ and RARγ (Fig. 6a,b). In comparison, the RARb RARE exhibited strong binding to all three receptors RARα, RARβ and RARγ in the same ovary sample (Fig. 6c). A quantitative comparison of the relative binding efficiencies shows that the Stra8 RARE does not bind RARα above background levels and it binds RARβ and RARγ about 5 times less efficiently than the RARb RARE (Fig. 6d). If a RARE is needed for Stra8 expression, it should be present in the promoter proximal 400 bp region, previously shown to be sufficient for germ cell expression in vivo24. However, an in silico approach was used to analyse −10 kb upstream and +10 kb downstream of the mouse Stra8 gene for the presence of any other sequences resembling a RARE. We identified a putative DR1 RARE (direct repeat with 1 bp spacer) located at −742 bp upstream of the Stra8 transcription start site, but we detected no binding of any RARs to this sequence using ChIP analysis on E13.5 ovary/mesonephros. These findings demonstrate that the Stra8 regulatory region is less effective in binding RARs than the RARb RARE present in the RARE-lacZ transgene used here to detect RA activity. This observation provides further evidence that RARE-lacZ is more sensitive to RA induction than Stra8, thus supporting our hypothesis that Stra8 expression in fetal ovary does not require RA.

Figure 6: Comparison of RA receptor binding to the Stra8 and RARb promoters in ovary.
figure 6

(a) The promoter region of mouse Stra8 is displayed showing the location of a putative RARE as well as binding sites for PCR primers used for chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) analysis. (b) ChIP results for Stra8 using RAR antibodies compared to input DNA (diluted 100-fold) detected with primers flanking the Stra8 RARE. (c) ChIP results for RARb detected with primers flanking its RARE. (d) Quantitation of RAR binding (% input) from the above ChIP results was performed by determining the amount of RAR-specific signal compared with input DNA for either Stra8 (open bar) or RARb (solid bar); ChIP results are from two independent experiments using different chromatin preparations (range is indicated above bars). IgG, antibody negative control; IP, immunoprecipitate; M, markers for DNA size in kilobase pairs (kb); NS, non-specific primers for region located several kb from either Stra8 or RARb RAREs; S, specific primers for RARE.

Discussion

Our studies provide evidence that gonadal Stra8 expression and induction of meiosis does not require endogenous RA. We demonstrate that Raldh2−/− and Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− embryos express Stra8 in embryonic ovary, despite no RA activity detected in mesonephros/ovary using either embryos carrying the RARE-lacZ transgene or a tissue explant assay utilizing an RA reporter cell line harbouring RARE-lacZ. Although RARE-lacZ is expressed in wild-type mesonephros, it is not expressed in wild-type ovary raising the concern that this transgene may not function in ovary for some reason other than a lack of RA. However, we demonstrate that RARE-lacZ is able to detect physiological levels of RA in the ovary by showing that RARE-lacZ can be induced in ovary by treatment with as little as 25 nM RA, thus strengthening our argument that RA signalling does not normally occur in the ovary and thus cannot be required for Stra8 induction. RARE-lacZ contains multiple copies of the efficient RARE found upstream of the RARb gene, which we demonstrate here by ChIP to be much more efficient than the putative RARE upstream of Stra8. Thus, if a very low level of RA remains in Raldh2−/− and Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− ovaries that is undetectable by RARE-lacZ, our findings suggest that Stra8 would be unable to respond to such low levels.

Our observation that E13.5 wild-type ovary does not exhibit detectable RA activity using the F9 RA-reporter cell assay contradicts a previous report suggesting that the ovary contains nearly as much RA as mesonephros using this assay4; in those studies we suggest that the ovary may not have been cleanly separated from the mesonephros as was done in our studies where we discarded ovary tissue directly adjacent to the mesonephros. Also, previous studies with the RARE-lacZ transgene reported that a very small amount of RA activity is detected at the anterior tip of the wild-type ovary at E13.5, presumably by diffusion of RA synthesized in the mesonephros by Raldh2, as the ovary itself does not express RA-generating enzymes4. However, no such RARE-lacZ activity was observed in our studies of E13.5 wild-type ovaries, suggesting that RA cannot efficiently travel from the mesonephros to the ovary. Even if small levels of RA can reach the anterior ovary by E13.5, this limited region of RA signalling does not correlate with widespread expression of Stra8 throughout the anterior–posterior length of the ovary at E13.5. Also, as loss of RA synthesis in Raldh2−/− embryos completely eliminates the large amount of RA activity present in the mesonephros, any diffusion of RA that may normally occur from mesonephros to the ovary would not occur in the Raldh2−/− ovary, thus demonstrating that RA is unnecessary for Stra8 expression observed throughout the anterior–posterior extent of mutant ovaries.

Endogenous RA is estimated to be in the 10–40 nM range in most RA target tissues of mouse embryos13,21 and 11 nM in adult testis where sperm are actively undergoing meiosis26. In previous studies, Stra8 was found to be induced in cultured fetal testis following treatment with supraphysiological doses of RA in the range of 25- to 50-fold higher than endogenous levels, i.e., 0.7 μM RA3,22 or 1.0 μM RA4. We suggest that high levels of RA may induce Stra8 through the weak RARE located upstream of its promoter, but our ChIP studies suggest that Stra8 is not normally a target of RA as its promoter binds RARs very weakly and may thus be unable to respond to endogenous levels of RA. We also suggest that findings from studies utilizing RAR antagonists3,4 may not reflect the physiological role of endogenous RA, as such compounds have been shown to exert non-specific effects on other nuclear receptors, including one documented case, in which an RARα antagonist was shown to also induce PPARγ27. In addition, compounds such as citral or disulfiram, which are often used to inhibit RALDH-mediated metabolism of retinaldehyde to RA4, will inhibit metabolism of other aldehyde compounds by 15 additional members of the aldehyde dehydrogenase family with functions other than RA synthesis28. Thus, the genetic results obtained here with Raldh2−/− and Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− embryos, demonstrating that RA is not required for meiotic initiation, are less prone to artifacts and misinterpretation compared with these other approaches.

Although the genetic loss-of-function studies for Cyp26b1 clearly show that expression of this P450 enzyme in Sertoli cells is required to delay meiosis in the testis4,5,6, our findings reveal that one should not assume that Cyp26b1 functions only in the degradation of RA. Instead, we suggest that Cyp26b1 functions either by degrading an as yet unknown inducer of Stra8 derived from the mesonephros or by synthesizing an inhibitor of Stra8 in the testis. Although the former hypothesis is supported by our testis/mesonephros explant studies suggesting that a factor other than RA travels from the mesonephros to the testis to induce Stra8, the latter hypothesis finds support from older studies suggesting the existence of a meiosis-inhibiting factor produced in the fetal testis2. The latter hypothesis is also supported by recent studies suggesting that Sertoli cells may secrete a meiosis-preventing substance29, and that high levels of RA (1–10 μM) may inhibit meiosis-preventing substance action30. Accordingly, high levels of RA may act as a competitive substrate inhibitor for some other activity of Cyp26b1, providing a non-genomic mechanism to explain the ability of supraphysiological RA to induce Stra8. In addition, recent findings have shown that naive ovary cultured separately from mesonephros in the absence of RA spontaneously induces Stra8 and initiates meiosis31, and Fgf9−/− fetal testis expresses Stra8 and undergoes meiosis despite retaining Cyp26b1 expression32, further suggesting that RA is not required to induce Stra8. Our observation of Stra8 expression in Raldh2−/− gonads lacking RA synthesis thus provides important information needed to guide future studies toward understanding the role of Cyp26b1 in sex-specific timing of meiotic initiation.

Methods

RA-deficient mice

Raldh2−/− embryos11 and Raldh2−/−;Raldh3−/− double homozygous embryos14,33 were previously described. Single and double mutants were identified by PCR genotyping of yolk sac DNA. Rescue of embryos by maternal dietary RA supplementation was performed as previously described15 with low RA doses demonstrated to provide embryos an amount of RA in the normal physiological range13. The final RA concentration added to mouse chow was 0.1 mg g−1 food, and treatment was from E6.75 to E9.25; all embryos analysed (wild-type and mutant) were from parents housed together that received the same brief RA treatment. At E9.25, pregnant mice were returned to standard mouse chow until the point of analysis at E12.0–E14.5. Rescued Raldh2−/− embryos were easily identified by stunted forelimbs and exhibited defects in hindlimb interdigital development, as previously described15. All mouse studies conformed to the regulatory standards adopted by the Animal Research Committee at the Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute.

Whole-mount in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry

Whole-mount in situ hybridization was performed on gonads dissected from wild-type and mutant embryos at E12.0–E14.5. Gonads were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) overnight, followed by in situ hybridization with Stra8 and Scp3 digoxigenin-labeled antisense riboprobes prepared as described previously34. Stained whole-mount gonads were post-fixed for 1 h with 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS, then embedded in 3% agarose and sectioned at 30 μm with a vibratome. For immunohistochemistry, dissected gonads were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde, cryopreserved in 30% sucrose overnight at 4 °C and then embedded in Tissue-Tek OCT compound (Sakura Finetek), oriented, and stored at −80 °C. Cryosections were cut at a thickness of 12 μm, and immunostaining was performed on cryosections using 1:100 (0.01 mg ml−1) anti-γH2AX (Upstate Biotechnology) and visualized with 3′,3′-diaminobenzidine Substrate Kit (Vector Laboratories). Sections were examined by bright field microscopy using a Nikon LABOPHOT-2 microscope.

Detection of RA activity

The RARE-lacZ RA-reporter transgene, which places lacZ (encoding β-galactosidase) under the control of a RARE, was used for in situ detection of RA activity in embryonic tissues19. Tissues from wild-type and Raldh2−/− embryos carrying RARE-lacZ were dissected free from the embryo, fixed, then stained with X-gal. RA activity in ovary and mesonephros was also examined using a tissue explant RA bioassay using the Sil-15 F9-RARE-lacZ RA-reporter cell line20,35. In this bioassay, pieces of ovary and mesonephros were dissected cleanly away from each other and the portion of the ovary next to the mesonephros was discarded; tissues were cultured overnight on a monolayer of F9 cells carrying a RARE-lacZ transgene, followed by staining of the reporter cells with X-gal.

Gonad culture

Methods for culture and ketoconazole treatment of testis were similar to those previously reported3. Tissues were dissected from E13.5 embryos in PBS. Intact testes/mesonephros complexes and testes alone were cultured in Millicell culture plate inserts (Millipore) at 37 °C in 5% CO2. Tissues were cultured for 48 h in retinoid-free DMEM/F-12 culture media (Gibco-Life Technologies), containing either 0.7 μM ketoconazole (Sigma Chemical) dissolved in 0.1% dimethyl sulfoxide or vehicle only (untreated). After 24 h, culture medium was replaced with fresh medium supplemented with 0.7 μM ketoconazole or vehicle. At the completion of the 48 h culture period, tissues were washed twice in PBS and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde at 4 °C overnight, then processed for whole-mount in situ hybridization using a Stra8 riboprobe; alternatively, some testis/mesonephros samples were stained for RARE-lacZ activity with X-gal. RA treatment of E13.5 ovary/mesonephros was performed by culture in the above medium for 18 h in the absence or presence of all-trans-RA (Sigma Chemical) at 25 or 100 nM, followed by staining for RARE-lacZ activity with X-gal.

Chromatin immunoprecipitation

ChIP was performed according to the manufacturer's ChIP protocol (Active Motif). A total of 68 intact ovary/mesonephros complexes from E13.5 wild-type mouse embryos were dissected and crosslinked with 1% formaldehyde at room temperature for 15 min. Isolated nuclei (in 650 μl) were sonicated for 20–23 pulses of 10 s each on ice at 40% output amplitude using a 1.6-mm microtip probe from Misonix Digital Sonicator 4000 (Cole-Parmer Instrument Company) to shear DNA to an average size of 500 bp followed by centrifugation at 15,700 g for 10 min at 4 °C. At this point, a small portion of supernatant was stored as input control. For each ChIP reaction, immunoprecipitation was performed using 150 μl of sheared chromatin mixed with 3 μg of either ChIP-grade anti-RAR-α (sc-551, Santa Cruz Biotechnology), anti-RAR-β (Affinity Bioreagents), anti-RAR-γ (sc-550 Santa Cruz Biotechnology), or control IgG (Cell Signaling) along with 25 μl preblocked protein G-coated magnetic beads (Active Motifs) for 4 h at 4 °C. Beads were washed thoroughly, and eluted DNA–protein complexes were reverse crosslinked and purified. The purified immunoprecipitated DNA was analysed by PCR, and was compared with input DNA that was diluted 100-fold; PCR products were examined by 3% agarose gel electrophoresis. ChIP analysis was performed in two independent experiments. Quantitation of RAR binding (% input) was performed by determining the amount of RAR-specific signal compared with input DNA from two independent experiments. RARE-specific and non-specific primer sequences for mouse Stra8 and RARb promoters used in this study were as follows:

Stra8 RARE-Fwd: 5′-ACTGCTACTGGGACCTTGAAGATG-3″

Stra8 RARE-Rev: 5′-CTCTCAGAACACAAACGGTAGGAG-3′

Stra8-NS-Fwd: 5′-TGACCACACAGATCTTGAACTTGC-3′

Stra8-NS-Rev: 5′-CACGCCTGGTCTTCATGCACTA-3′

RARb RARE-Fwd: 5′-TGGCATTGTTTGCACGCTGA-3′

RARb RARE-Rev: 5′-CCCCCCTTTGGCAAAGAATAGA-3′

RARb NS-F: 5′-AGTACAGACCTTCCAAGAGTGCCT-3′

RARb NS-R: 5′-GTCATGGGAAAGAGAGGTTGAGC-3′

Additional information

How to cite this article: Kumar, S. et al. Sex-specific timing of meiotic initiation is regulated by Cyp26b1 independent of retinoic acid signalling. Nat. Commun. 2:151 doi: 10.1038/ncomms1136 (2011).