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1.
Summary A marked growth in the length of testes ofDrosophila hydei males occurred during pupal development. This growth continued over the first 8 days of adult life and in the young adults sperm were not produced until the testes increased approximately threefold in length to about 28 mm. The length of testes is correlated with genetic factors on the X and Y chromosomes. In males lacking a Y chromosome (X/O) or the short arm (YS) of the Y chromosome (X/YL) the testes were about half the length of testes of control males (X/Y) or double Y males (X/Y/Y). Males with deletions of the distal YL chromosome arm had testicular lengths equivalent to the controls. Males with short testes (X/O and X/YL) showed disruptions to spermatogenesis at meiosis and an absence of normal spermatid elongation. Reduction of active ribosomal RNA genes on the X chromosome in X/O caused an increased expression ofbobbed (bb) and a corresponding reduction in length of testes. Severelybobbed X/O males had very few cysts of spermatogonia and these cysts did not develop into primary spermatocytes.  相似文献   

2.
Crosses between Drosophila mojavensis and D. arizonensis produce fertile females, but the males from the cross ♂ D. mojavensis × ♀ D. arizonensis are sterile. The chromosomal basis of sperm immotility was studied in these hybrids. Interspecific crossing-over was avoided by crossing hybrid males to pure-species females, and chromosomal identification in backcross progeny was possible by means of electrophoretic markers. The main findings are as follows. The Y-chromosome and two autosomes are involved in the determination of sperm motility. The other autosomes, with the exception of the sixth which was not tested, appear to have no effect. The effect of the D. arizonensis X-chromosome was not examined, but it is established that the D. mojavensis X-chromosome has no effect on sperm motility in males carrying the D. arizonensis Y-chromosome and any combination of autosomes. The Y-chromosome and the two autosomes interact with each other in a simple and predictable way, so that certain combinations of these chromosomes always produce motile sperm and others immotile sperm. Thus, asymmetrical male hybrid sterility may have a simple genetic basis. In contrast to ethological isolation, the genetic basis for this postmating isolating mechanism does not appear to vary among conspecific populations, an observation which suggests that postmating isolation antedates ethological isolation in these species.  相似文献   

3.
In the wood lemming (Myopus schisticolor) three genetic types of sex chromosome constitution in females are postulated: XX, X*X and X*Y (X*=X with a mutation inactivating the male determining effect of the Y chromosome). Males are all XY. It is shown in the present paper that the two types of X chromosomes, X and X*, exhibit differences in the G-band patterns of their short arms. In addition, it was demonstrated in unbanded chromosomes that the short arm in X* is shorter than in X. The origin of these differences is still obscure; but they allow to identify and to distinguish the individual types of sex chromosome constitution, as of XX versus X*X females and of X*Y females versus XY males, on the basis of G-banded chromosome preparations from somatic cells.  相似文献   

4.
The Myh11‐CreERT2 mouse line (Cre+) has gained increasing application because of its high lineage specificity relative to other Cre drivers targeting smooth muscle cells (SMCs). This Cre allele, however, was initially inserted into the Y chromosome (X/YCre+), which excluded its application in female mice. Our group established a Cre+ colony from male ancestors. Surprisingly, genotype screening identified female carriers that stably transmitted the Cre allele to the following generations. Crossbreeding experiments revealed a pattern of X‐linked inheritance for the transgene (k > 1000), indicating that these female carries acquired the Cre allele through a mechanism of Y to X chromosome translocation. Further characterization demonstrated that in hemizygous X/XCre+ mice Cre activity was restricted to a subset arterial SMCs, with Cre expression in arteries decreased by 50% compared to X/YCre+ mice. This mosaicism, however, diminished in homozygous XCre+/XCre+ mice. In a model of aortic aneurysm induced by a SMC‐specific Tgfbr1 deletion, the homozygous XCre+/XCre+ Cre driver unmasked the aortic phenotype that is otherwise subclinical when driven by the hemizygous X/XCre+ Cre line. In conclusion, the Cre allele carried by this female mouse line is located on the X chromosome and subjected to X‐inactivation. The homozygous XCre+/XCre+ mice produce uniform Cre activity in arterial SMCs.  相似文献   

5.
The nucleolus organizers on the X and Y chromosomes of Drosophila melanogaster are the sites of 200-250 tandemly repeated genes for ribosomal RNA. As there is no meiotic crossing over in male Drosophila, the X and Y chromosomal rDNA arrays should be evolutionarily independent, and therefore divergent. The rRNAs produced by X and Y are, however, very similar, if not identical. Molecular, genetic and cytological analyses of a series of X chromosome rDNA deletions (bb alleles) showed that they arose by unequal exchange through the nucleolus organizers of the X and Y chromosomes. Three separate exchange events generated compound X·Y L chromosomes carrying mainly Y-specific rDNA. This led to the hypothesis that X-Y exchange is responsible for the coevolution of X and Y chromosomal rDNA. We have tested and confirmed several of the predictions of this hypothesis: First, X· YL chromosomes must be found in wild populations. We have found such a chromosome. Second, the X·YL chromosome must lose the YL arm, and/or be at a selective disadvantage to normal X+ chromosomes, to retain the normal morphology of the X chromosome. Six of seventeen sublines founded from homozygous X·YLbb stocks have become fixed for chromosomes with spontaneous loss of part or all of the appended YL. Third, rDNA variants on the X chromosome are expected to be clustered within the X+ nucleolus organizer, recently donated (" Y") forms being proximal, and X-specific forms distal. We present evidence for clustering of rRNA genes containing Type 1 insertions. Consequently, X-Y exchange is probably responsible for the coevolution of X and Y rDNA arrays.  相似文献   

6.
We have used a sensitive electrophoretic technique for estimating the activity, or ratio, of two allozymes of the X-chromosome-linked enzyme phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK-1), in order to investigate the randomness of X-chromosome expression in the derivatives of the three primary cell lineages of the early mouse conceptus. The maternally derived Pgk-1 allele is preferentially expressed in the derivatives of the primitive endoderm and trophectoderm lineages at 6 1/2 days post coitum in Pgk-1a/Pgk-1b heterozygous conceptuses, and in the one informative 5 1/2-day heterozygous conceptus analysed. This evidence for preferential expression of the maternally derived X chromosome (Xm), so soon after the time of X-chromosome inactivation, favors the possibility that the preferential expression of Xm is a consequence of primary non-random X-chromosome inactivation, rather than a secondary selection phenomenon. The majority of embryos analysed at 4 1/2 and 5 1/2 days pc produced only a single PGK-1 band, corresponding to the allozyme produced by the Pgk-1 allele on Xm, although 50% of these embryos should have been heterozygous females. Possible explanations are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Drosophila melanogaster males heterozygous for the second chromosome locus Segregation Distorter preferentially transmit this chromosome to their progeny due to a dysfunctioning of SD +-bearing sperm. SD males with a normal sex chromosome constitution produce more females than males among SD + progeny. This report shows that this unequal recovery of sexes is enhanced from XY/Y; SD/SD + males and enhanced still further from XY/O; SD/SD + males. It is argued that the probability that a SD +-bearing sperm will dysfunction is related to its sex chromsome complement, with the relative probabilities of dysfunction ranked O> Y> X> XY. It is shown that a modified probit analysis accounts for the relationship between sex ratio and second chromosome segregation frequency for all paternal genotypes. Finally, SD/SD + males show no increase in sex chromosome nondisjunction with respect to a control.R. E. Denell was supported by U.S.P.H.S. Training Grant No. GM00337 and by a U.S.P.H.S. Postdoctoral Fellowship; George L. Gabor Miklos was supported by A.E.C. Contract No. AT (04-3)-34 PA150.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Position-effect variegation of eye pigmentation in the examined Dp(1;3)N 264-58 females is due to an insertion of a X-chromosome section including the white-locus into the proximal heterochromatic region of the third chromosome. The light and dark pigmented areas have a cell lineage basis (Fig. 2). Flies bearing the w +-duplication had two X-chromosomes marked with w a lz 50 e and w a rb rux 2 respectively (Fig. 3). X-ray induced mitotic recombination in presumptive eye cells of larvae resulted in w a lz 50e /w a rb rux 2 twin mosaic spots in the adult eyes. After young larvae were treated twin spots appeared, which had one partner light colored and one dark. Such combinations were rarely found after older larvae were treated. Treatment of young larvae in addition produced twin spots with one or both partners variegated (Figs. 5 and 6). Sometime after the stage at which younger larvae were treated and before the stage at which older larvae were treated the translocated w +-gene in each cell was determined for function or no function. As a result the progeny of each of these cells synthesized pigment or not during the pupal stage. At a temperature of 25.5° C the developmental phase during which determination, i.e. heterochromatization of the white gene, takes place, begins not earlier than 39 hours after egg laying and ends about 8 hours later (Fig. 7). In females heterozygous for the short arm of the heterochromatic Y-chromosome linked distally to the X-chromosome (Y S X/X) one twin spot partners is homozygous for this arm (Y SX/YS X), the other lacks it (X/X; Fig.4a). The Y SX/YS X-partner were more frequently dark pigmented than the X/X-partners (Tables 3 and 4). This shows that heterochromatization of the translocated w +-genes is markedly influenced by the genotype of the single cell. When two genotypes with varied amounts of heterochromatin were compared (Fig. 4) no difference in the phases of heterochromatization could be observed (Table 5). Therefore, when position-effect variegation is modified by varying the amount of heterochromatin in the genome the modification is probably not due to a shift in the phase of heterochromatization.

Vorgelegt von E. Hadorn  相似文献   

9.
Bromodeoxyuridine-dye technique analysis of X chromosome DNA synthesis in female adult and fetal mice carrying the balanced form of the T(X; 16) 16H translocation demonstrated that the structurally normal X chromosome was late replicating (and hence presumably inactive) in 93% of the adult cells and 99% of the 9-day embryo cells, with the X16 chromosome late replicating in the remaining cells. We conclude from these results that in T16H/+ females either there is preferential inactivation of the normal X chromosome or that, if inactivation is random, cell selection takes place before 9 days of development. Two 9-day female embryos with an unbalanced karyotype were also studied; both had two late-replicating chromosomes in most of their cells, one being the chromosome 16X, the other a normal X chromosome. These results, together with the presence of a late-replicating X16 chromosome in T16H/+ adult and fetal mice, support the concept that more than one inactivation center is present on the X chromosome of the mouse because the X16 and the 16x chromosomes can be late replicating.  相似文献   

10.
A transmissible dicentric chromosome was recovered in Drosophila melanogaster. The radiation-induced secondary chromosome rearrangement consists essentially of the entire Y and fourth chromosomes joined by 2R heterochromatin. The Y S · Y L 2Rh4 · chromosome pairs with the X and the free fourth chromosome to form a trivalent in meiosis that is unusual because it forms few chromosome bridges in primary spermatocytes and is transmitted at high frequency. We suggest that the orientation of the weaker fourth chromosome kinetochore eventually fails when opposing the stronger Y kinetochore so that the Y S · Y L 2Rh4 · moves to the pole to which the Y kinetochore is oriented. There is however an increased frequency of sex chromosome nondisjunction (14%) and of chromosome laggards (6%) in primary spermatocytes; the frequency of exceptional progeny of males containing the Y S · Y L 2Rh4 · was 7.44% compared with 0.25% in the controls. Disruption of normal sex chromosome disjunction also occurs in females containing the Y S · Y L 2Rh4 · and a compound X chromosome; the frequency of exceptional progeny was 2.55% versus 0.91% in the controls. Chromosome nondisjunction appears to occur when orientation of the X and Y kinetochores to the same pole is stabilized through tension by the orientation of one or both fourth chromosome kinetochores to the opposite pole. During anaphase, the orientation of the fourth chromosome kinetochore of the Y S · Y L 2Rh4 · appears to fail and the X and Y S · Y L 2Rh4 · chromosomes move to the same pole. Y S · Y L 2Rh4 · chromosome laggards occur with both the Y and fourth chromosome kinetochores amphitelically oriented. This orientation appears to be stable as a result of equal opposing forces toward opposite poles.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The w m Co duplication of Drosophila hydei (Dp (1; Y) 16B2-17B1) contains 13–16 bands in salivary gland chromosomes. The duplication resides preferentially in the X heterochromatin or on the Y chromosome. In some stocks frequent (up to 4×10-3) exchanges of the duplication occur between different Y chromosomes (T(X; Y) and free Y) or between the X and the Y chromosome. About 60% of the T(X; Y)-Y exchanges induce mutations in the Y chromosomal male fertility genes of the recipient Y chromosome. From the mutational spectrum generated by the T(X; Y)-Y transpositions and from the variable efficiency as acceptor of different X-Y translocations it can be concluded that the exchanges show a remarkable site specificity: distal positions in the long arm of the Y chromosome are occupied preferentially. More proximal positions in the long arm of insertions into the short arm of the Y chromosome are found only with a lower frequency. No transpositions to the autosomes have been recovered. Duplications are lost with highly differing frequencies. The losses are not linked with insertions of the w m Co element into a new position and are more frequent than transpositions. Therefore, we regard the w m Co element as a giant transposon.  相似文献   

12.
Sex chromosomes have a large effect on reproductive isolation and play an important role in hybrid inviability. In Drosophila hybrids, X-linked genes have pronounced deleterious effects on fitness in male hybrids, which have only one X chromosome. Several studies have succeeded at locating and identifying recessive X-linked alleles involved in hybrid inviability. Nonetheless, the density of dominant X-linked alleles involved in interspecific hybrid viability remains largely unknown. In this report, we study the effects of a panel of small fragments of the D. melanogaster X-chromosome carried on the D. melanogaster Y-chromosome in three kinds of hybrid males: D. melanogaster/D. santomea, D. melanogaster/D. simulans and D. melanogaster/D. mauritiana. D. santomea and D. melanogaster diverged over 10 million years ago, while D. simulans (and D. mauritiana) diverged from D. melanogaster over 3 million years ago. We find that the X-chromosome from D. melanogaster carries dominant alleles that are lethal in mel/san, mel/sim, and mel/mau hybrids, and more of these alleles are revealed in the most divergent cross. We then compare these effects on hybrid viability with two D. melanogaster intraspecific crosses. Unlike the interspecific crosses, we found no X-linked alleles that cause lethality in intraspecific crosses. Our results reveal the existence of dominant alleles on the X-chromosome of D. melanogaster which cause lethality in three different interspecific hybrids. These alleles only cause inviability in hybrid males, yet have little effect in hybrid females. This suggests that X-linked elements that cause hybrid inviability in males might not do so in hybrid females due to differing sex chromosome interactions.  相似文献   

13.
Specimens of the populations Hamburg and Wilhelmshaven of the ratflea N. fasciatus exhibit variation of the chromosome number in the range of 2n=20–23 and 2n=20–27 respectively, resulting from individual differences in the number of supernumerary chromosomes beyond the basic chromosome complement of 2n=20. The supernumerary chromosomes are mostly euchromatic and partly or completely homologous to each other and to the 10. pair of the basic complement. The numerical variation in the population Wilhelmshaven is produced by recurrent mitotic non-disjunction of the supernumerary chromosomes in anaphase II of spermatogenesis. Constant mitotic non-disjunction and preferential segregation of the supernumerary chromosomes towards the pronucleus leads to their accumulation in the population.—A multiple sex-chromosome mechanism of the type X1 X2 Y1 Y2 (male): X1 X1 X2 X2 (female) has been demonstrated for the population Wilhelmshaven of N. fasciatus. The X1 X2 Y1 Y2-chain of four is restricted to the male meiosis, in oogenesis two sex bivalents (X1 X1 and X2 X2) are formed. — The cytogenetic data presented do not support the concept of a closer phylogenetic relationship between the Aphaniptera and Nematocera, but do not preclude the possibility of a kinship of Aphaniptera and Neomecoptera.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The wood lemming, Myopus schisticolor, possesses a unique sex determining system comprising both XX and XY females. Normal female development in the presence of XY is guaranteed by a mutation on the X, apparently associated with a structural rearrangement in Xp. This mutation inactivates the testis-inducing and male-determining factor on the Y and distinguishes X* from X, and X*Y females from XY males. Normal fertility of X*Y females is ensured by a mitotic (double) nondisjunction mechanism which, at an early fetal stage, eliminates the Y from the germ line and replaces it by a copy of the X*.Numerical sex chromosome aberrations are not infrequent and the trisomics XXY and X*XY are relatively common. XXY individuals are sterile males with severe suppression of spermatogenesis. Among X*XY animals, both males and females, as well as a true lateral hermaphrodite have been observed. Primary deficiency of germ cells, impairment of spermatogenesis and sterility are characteristic traits of the X*XY males, whereas X*XY females have normal oogenesis and are fertile. Both these extremes (except female fertility) coexist in the true hermaphrodite described in the present study. These apparently contradictory observations are explainable under the assumption that X* and X in X*XY individuals are inactivated non-randomly or that the cells are distributed unequally. Inactivation of the X or X* determines whether or not the H-Y antigen will be expressed. When comparing conditions in Myopus and in man, an additional assumption has to be made in relation to the gene(s) involved in sex determination, located in Xp:In Myopus they do not escape inactivation, whereas in man they have been claimed to remain active.  相似文献   

15.
Paul G. Kratzer 《Genetics》1983,104(4):685-698
X-chromosome activity in early mouse development has been studied by a gene dosage method that involves measuring the activity level of the X-linked enzyme hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT) in single eggs and embryos from XO females and from females heterozygous for In(X)1H, a paracentric inversion of the X chromosome. The HPRT activity in oocytes increased threefold over a 24-hr period beginning after ovulation. Afterward, the activity plateaued in unfertilized eggs but continued to increase for at least 66 hr in presumed OY embryos. Both before and after ovulation, the level of activity in unfertilized eggs from In(X)/X females was twice that from XO females, and the distributions of activity in eggs for both sets of females remained unimodal. Beginning with the two-cell stage, distributions of activity for embryos from In(X)/X females were trimodal, which is evidence for embryonic activity. It is proposed that activation of a maternal mRNA or proenzyme is responsible for the HPRT activity increase in oocytes and early embryos and is supplemented by dosage-dependent activity of the embryonic Hprt gene as early as the two-cell stage.  相似文献   

16.
X-CHROMOSOME INACTIVATION AND DEVELOPMENTAL PATTERNS IN MAMMALS   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
1. The review considers information from mammalian embryology relevant to X-chromosome inactivation, and from X-inactivation relevant to mammalian embryology. 2. Properties of the inactive-X, by which it may be recognized are: sex chromatin, heteropycnosis, late replication and the absence of gene product. Each of these has advantages and disadvantages in particular circumstances. In some species the X carries constitutive heterochromatin, which must be distinguished from the facultative region. 3. The time of X-chromosome inactivation can be estimated from the time of appearance of sex chromatin or late replication, or inferred from the appearance of heterozygotes for X-linked genes or of experimental chimaeras. The estimated time varies with species, and in the mouse and rabbit is near the time of increase in RNA synthesis. 4. Whereas in eutherian mammals either the maternally or the paternally derived X may be inactivated in different cell lines, in marsupials the paternal X is always the inactive one. 5. During development various factors act to distort the patterns produced by random X-inactivation. These factors include cell selection, transfer of gene product, and migration and mingling of cells. 6. There is no clear evidence that X-chromosome inactivation is not complete. 7. In female germ cells both X-chromosomes appear to be active. In male ones both X and Y appear inactive during most of spermatogenesis, although probably in early stages all X chromosomes present are active. 8. The active and inactive X-chromosomes may be differentiated by presence or absence of some non-histone protein or other polyanionic substance. 9. If the genes concerned in synthesis or attachment of this substance are on the X-chromosome then the differentiation will be self-maintaining. 10. The initiation of the differentiation requires either the attachment of different X-chromosomes to different sites, or some interaction of X-linked and autosomal genes, concerned in inducing or repressing activity. Some possible models are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
M-T. Yamamoto 《Genetica》1993,87(3):151-158
Interspecific crosses between D. melanogaster and D. simulans or its sibling species result in unisexual inviability of the hybrids. Mostly, crosses of D. melanogaster females X D. simulans males produce hybrid females. On the other hand, only hybrid males are viable in the reciprocal crosses. A classical question is the cause of the unisexual hybrid inviability on the chromosomal level. Is it due to the absence of a D. simulans X chromosome or is it due to the presence of a D. simulans Y chromosome? A lack of adequate chromosomal rearrangements available in D. simulans has made it difficult to answer this question. However, it has been assumed that the lethality results from the absence of the D. simulans X rather than the presence of the D. simulans Y. Recently I synthesized the first D. simulans compound-XY chromosome that consists of almost the entire X and Y chromosomes. Males carrying the compound-XY and no free Y chromosome are fertile. By utilizing the compound-XY chromosome, the viability of hybrids with various constitutions of cytoplasm and sex chromosomes has been examined. The results consistently demonstrate that the absence of a D. simulans X chromosome in hybrid genome, and not the presence of the Y chromosome, is a determinant of the hybrid inviability.  相似文献   

18.
Driving X chromosomes (XDs) bias their own transmission through males by killing Y‐bearing gametes. These chromosomes can in theory spread rapidly in populations and cause extinction, but many are found as balanced polymorphisms or as “cryptic” XDs shut down by drive suppressors. The relative likelihood of these outcomes and the evolutionary pathways through which they come about are not well understood. An XD was recently discovered in the mycophagous fly, Drosophila testacea, presenting the opportunity to compare this XD with the well‐studied XD of its sister species, Drosophila neotestacea. Comparing features of independently evolved XDs in young sister species is a promising avenue towards understanding how XDs and their counteracting forces change over time. In contrast to the XD of D. neotestacea, we find that the XD of D. testacea is old, with its origin predating the radiation of three species: D. testacea, D. neotestacea and their shared sister species, Drosophila orientacea. Motivated by the suggestion that older XDs should be more deleterious to carriers, we assessed the effect of the XD on both male and female fertility. Unlike what is known from D. neotestacea, we found a strong fitness cost in females homozygous for the XD in D. testacea: a large proportion of homozygous females failed to produce offspring after being housed with males for several days. Our male fertility experiments show that although XD male fertility is lower under sperm‐depleting conditions, XD males have comparable fertility to males carrying a standard X chromosome under a free‐mating regime, which may better approximate conditions in wild populations of D. testacea. Lastly, we demonstrate the presence of autosomal suppression of X chromosome drive. Our results provide support for a model of XD evolution where the dynamics of young XDs are governed by fitness consequences in males, whereas in older XD systems, both suppression and fitness consequences in females likely supersede male fitness costs.  相似文献   

19.
The genetic limits of sixty-four deficiencies in the vicinity of the euchromatic-heterochromatic junction of the X chromosome were mapped with respect to a number of proximal recessive lethal mutations. They were also tested for male fertility in combination with three Y chromosomes carrying different amounts of proximal X-chromosome-derived material (BSYy+, y+Ymal126 and y+Ymal+). All deficiencies that did not include the locus of bb and a few that did were male-fertile in all male-viable Df(1)/Dp(1;Y) combinations. Nineteen bb deficiencies fell into six different classes by virtue of their male-fertility phenotypes when combined with the duplicated Y chromosomes. The six categories of deficiencies are consistent with a formalism that invokes three factors or regions at the base of the X, one distal and two proximal to bb, which bind a substance critical for precocious inactivation of the X chromosome in the primary spermatocyte. Free duplications carrying these regions or factors compete for the substance in such a way that, in the presence of such duplications, proximally deficient X chromosomes are unable to command sufficient substance for proper control of X-chromosome gene activity preparatory to spermatogenesis. We conclude that there is no single factor at the base of the X that is required for the fertility of males whose genotype is otherwise normal.  相似文献   

20.
Univalent sex chromosomes in spermatocytes of Sxr-carrying mice   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Pachytene configurations of the sex chromosomes were studied in whole-mount, silver-stained preparations of spermatocytes in mice with XY,Sxr, XX,Sxr, XO,Sxr, XO,Sxr+512 and T(X;4)37H,YSxr chromosomes, and non-Sxr-carrying controls. XY,Sxr males showed an increased number of X and Y univalents and of self-synapsed Y chromosomes. In T(X;4)37H,YSxr males an increased proportion of trivalent+Y configurations was also accompanied by higher numbers of self-paired Y univalents; the proportion of trivalent+X4 was not increased, but that of self-synapsed X4 univalents was. There was more selfsynapsis in cells containing one univalent than in cells containing two univalents. Spermatocytes of XX,Sxr mice contained single univalent X, which was never seen to be self-synapsed, but self-synapsis of the X occurred in a proportion of cells in XO,Sxr males. There were no self-paired X chromosomes in the XO,Sxr+512 mouse although lowlevel pairing of the 512 chromosome occurred. All four XX,Sxr and XO,Sxr males contained testicular sperm, and testicular sperm were also present in one T(X;4)37H male, while another such male had sperm in the caput. It is concluded that (1) self-synapsis of univalents is affected by variable conditions in the cell as well as by the DNA sequences of the chromosome, and (2) that the level of achievable spermatogenesis is not always rigidly predetermined by a chromosome anomaly but can be modulated by the genetic background.  相似文献   

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