Foreword
Reproduction, Fertility and Development 31(7) iii-iv https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv31n7_FO
Published: 21 June 2019
Australia has a unique mammalian fauna that has evolved since the separation of the Australian continent with the break-up of Gondwana over 60 million years ago. Internationally we are renowned for our iconic mammals, particularly our marsupials and monotremes including the kangaroo, koala and platypus. Yet sadly, research on our native species is not a national priority.
Marilyn Renfree has spent most of her research life uncovering the secrets of marsupial reproduction and development, and by comparing them to eutherian mammals, she has discovered the many novel ways that make marsupials ideal biomedical models. Through this work she and colleagues have made many fundamental contributions to mammalian development, reproduction, genomics evolution and importantly marsupial and monotreme management and conservation. This special issue contains a broad array of articles stemming from the Reproduction Down Under conference held in Kingscliff NSW in August 2017 with participants from all over the world (Fig. 1). The conference was organised to highlight the contributions of Professor Marilyn Renfree to Australian science in the fields of reproduction and development in the year of her 70th birthday.
This conference covered a diverse set of topics in reproduction and development, divided into five main themes over two and a half days. These themes are: Contraception and Conservation; Development and Diapause; Sex and Reproduction, Genomic Imprinting and Marsupial and Monotreme Genomics. Each of these topics is reflected in the papers which follow in this volume and highlight the international interest and amazing contributions that marsupials and monotremes have made to modern biology.
Andrew Pask, Geoff Shaw, Kirsty Short and Marilyn Renfree
Scientific program of the meeting
Conservation and contraception
Steve Johnston
Koalas, echidnas and wombat conservation
Thomas Hildebrandt
Biotechnology for conservation of wild mammals
Development and diapause
Geoff Shaw
Embryonic diapause: a developmental breather
Jane Fenelon
How to stop and restart an embryo: diapause around the world
Stephen Frankenberg
Doing it differently: specification in the absence of an inner cell mass
Claire Roberts
The dynamic placenta
Genomic imprinting
Anne Ferguson-Smith
Genomic imprinting in eutherians and marsupials
Shunsuke Suzuki
Emergence of novel CpG islands and genomic imprinting in mammalian evolution
Mike O’Neill
Imprinting in the placenta
Fumi Ishino and Tomoko Kaneko-Ishino
Acquired traits in mammals: genomic imprinting and roles of LTR retrotransposon-derived genes
Jessica Stringer
Genomic imprinting in mammary glands
Growth and lactation
Kevin Nicholas
Marvels of marsupial milk
Elizabeth Pharo
Comparative lactation of seals and tammars
Jenni Hetz and Brandon Menzies
The growth axis and lactation
John Hearn
The top end – pituitary perspectives
Marsupial and monotreme genetics and genomics
Frank Grutzner
Sex chromosomes of monotremes
Asao Fujiyama
Genomics of non-model organisms
Janine Deakin
Marsupial Chromosomics: bridging the gap between genomes and chromosomes
Rachel J. O’Neill
Centromere evolution and function in marsupials
Paul Waters
Comparative genomics of mars and mono
Rob Miller
Immune receptor innovation captured in marsupial and monotreme genomes
Kathy Belov
A devil of a problem
Sex and reproduction
Robin Lovell-Badge
Making a (eutherian) male
Peter Koopman
SRY: Getting the ball rolling
Humphrey Yao
Gonads and germ cells
Dagmar Wilhelm
A new candidate gene for disorders/differences of sex development
Jo Bowles
An essential function for a lonely Sox
Andrew Pask
Gonadal sex reversal
Andrew Sinclair
Insights from targeted gene sequencing of a large international cohort of patients with Disorders of Sex Development
Nathalie Josso
The importance of anti-Mullerian hormone in reproduction
Richard Behringer
Development: bats, mice and marsupials
Gen Yamada
Molecular mechanisms of external genitalia formation; an emerging model for hormone-induced organogenesis
Final session
Marilyn Renfree
Reproduction Down Under
John Funder
Summary of Meeting