Invention Grant
- Patent Title: Germ cell marker using fish vasa gene
- Patent Title (中): 使用鱼vasa基因的生殖细胞标记
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Application No.: US12532304Application Date: 2008-03-26
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Publication No.: US08222385B2Publication Date: 2012-07-17
- Inventor: Goro Yoshizaki , Yutaka Takeuchi , Kazue Nagasawa , Kentaro Higuchi , Tetsuro Morita , Naoki Kabeya
- Applicant: Goro Yoshizaki , Yutaka Takeuchi , Kazue Nagasawa , Kentaro Higuchi , Tetsuro Morita , Naoki Kabeya
- Applicant Address: JP JP
- Assignee: National University Corporation Tokyo University of Marine Science Technology,Nippon Suisan Kaisha, Ltd.
- Current Assignee: National University Corporation Tokyo University of Marine Science Technology,Nippon Suisan Kaisha, Ltd.
- Current Assignee Address: JP JP
- Agency: Chalker Flores, LLP
- Agent Chainey P. Singleton; Edwin S. Flores
- Priority: JP2007-080022 20070326
- International Application: PCT/JP2008/000743 WO 20080326
- International Announcement: WO2008/129838 WO 20081030
- Main IPC: C07H21/04
- IPC: C07H21/04 ; C07H21/02 ; C12N5/00 ; C12N5/02 ; A01K67/027

Abstract:
In order to examine whether or not a germ cell derived from a donor fish, which has been transplanted into a recipient fish of a different species by a surrogate fish technique, grows or matures in the gonad of the recipient fish, it is necessary to use, as an indicator, a trait that is specifically expressed in the germ cell and can be used to distinguish the recipient fish from the donor fish. Vasa gene, which is a germ cell-specific gene, is specific to a primordial germ cell and a spermatogonium/an oogonium, and it is not expressed in a somatic cell. In the present invention, the Vasa gene sequences of a tuna, a chub mackerel, a spotted mackerel, an eastern little tuna, and a drumfish are determined, and the expression of such gene is used as a marker for a germ cell. In addition, according to the present invention, it is possible to specifically detect only a tuna Vasa gene in Vasa gene sequences that are highly conserved in fishes, without sequencing. Thus, a tuna-derived germ cell can be reliably and simply identified in the gonad of the recipient fish. As a result, the growth or breeding of tuna can be carried out with good efficiency. Moreover, utilizing the aforementioned findings, even in a case in which not only a tuna but also another Perciformes fish is used as a donor, a germ cell derived from the donor fish can be efficiently detected from the gonad of a recipient fish of a different species.
Public/Granted literature
- US20100132056A1 Germ Cell Marker Using Fish Vasa Gene Public/Granted day:2010-05-27
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