Extreme olfactory sensitivity of silver and bighead carp to overlapping suites of 21-carbon steroids suggests that these species, and likely all other Cyprinoidei, employ them as pheromones

Gen Comp Endocrinol. 2024 May 1:350:114471. doi: 10.1016/j.ygcen.2024.114471. Epub 2024 Feb 17.

Abstract

Although well established that several fishes including goldfish in the suborder Cypinoidei within the family Cypriniformes use the maturation-inducing steroid 17,20β-dihydroxy-pregn-4-ene-3-one (17,20βP) and its metabolites as a priming pheromone which they detect with sensitivity and specificity, it is unclear whether and how other Cypriniformes might have evolved to do so. This study examined this question in the family Xenocyprididae. Using electro-olfactogram recording we tested the olfactory sensitivity of silver (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) and bighead carp (H. nobilis) to a range of 213 steroids in 21 mixtures at 10-9M. While silver carp detected 6 of 21 mixtures, bighead carp detected 5 (p< 0.05). Silver carp were sensitive to 13 21-carbon steroids in these mixtures including 17,20βP while bighead carp detected 9, including 8 detected by silver carp. This assortment of steroids overlapped that detected by goldfish (family Cyprinidae) but no non-Cyprinoid, suggesting common evolutionary origin and function with differences characteristic of species-specificity.

Keywords: Asian carp; EOG; Evolution; Hormonal pheromones; Maturation-Inducing Steroid (MIS); Olfaction; Priming; Species-specificity.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Carps*
  • Goldfish
  • Pheromones*

Substances

  • Pheromones