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1.
We studied the timing of mitotic loss of maternally and paternally derived chromosomes among the progeny of Drosophila melanogaster females homozygous for an amorphic mutation in ncd, a gene encoding a kinesin-like protein. In order to determine the division at which chromosome loss occurs, we estimated the fraction of XO nuclei resulting from X chromosome loss by scoring the phenotype of 47 adult cuticular landmarks in 160 XX-XO mosaics (gynandromorphs) derived from maternal X chromosome loss, and 33 gynandromorphs derived from paternal X chromosome loss. The results show that while most of the mitotic loss of maternally derived chromosomes occurs at the first cleavage division, the mitotic loss of paternally derived chromosomes occurs only at the second and later divisions. This means that paternally derived chromosomes are immune from the effects of ncd prior to karyogamy, which occurs after the first cleavage division. We discuss the implications of these results for the function of the ncd gene product and for other kinesin-like proteins in Drosophila.  相似文献   

2.
A new mutant, mit (mitotic loss inducer), is described. The mutant is recessive and maternal in action, producing gynandromorphs and haplo-4 mosaics among the progeny of homozygous mit females. Mosaic loss of maternal or paternal chromosomes can occur. The probabilities of either maternal or paternal X chromosome loss are equal. mit has been mapped to approximately 57 on the standard X chromosome map.-Using gyandromorphs generated by mit, a morphogenetic fate map, placing the origins of 40 cuticular structures on the blastoderm surface, has been constructed. This fate map is consistent with embryological data and with the two other fate maps generated in different ways.  相似文献   

3.
Bruce S. Baker 《Genetics》1975,80(2):267-296
The effects of a male-specific meiotic mutant, paternal loss (pal), in D. melanogaster have been examined genetically. The results indicate the following. (1) When homozygous in males, pal can cause loss, but not nondisjunction, of any chromosome pair. The pal-induced chromosome loss produces exceptional progeny that apparently failed to receive one, or more, paternal chromosomes and, in addition, mosaic progeny during whose early mitotic divisions one or more paternal chromosomes were lost. (2) Only paternally derived chromosomes are lost. (3) Mitotic chromosome loss can occur in homozygous pal+ progeny of pal males. (4) Chromosomes differ in their susceptibility to pal-induced loss. The site responsible for the insensitivity vs. sensitivity of the X chromosome to pal mapped to the basal region of the X chromosome at, or near, the centromere. From these results, it is suggested that pal+ acts in male gonia to specify a product that is a component of, or interacts with, the centromeric region of chromosomes and is necessary for the normal segregation of paternal chromosomes. In the presence of pal, defective chromosomes are produced and these chromosomes tend to get lost during the early cleavage divisions of the zygote. (5) The loss of heterologous chromosome pairs is not independent; there are more cases of simultaneous loss of two chromosomes than expected from independence. Moreover, an examination of cases of simultaneous somatic loss of two heterologs reveals an asymmetry in the early mitotic divisions of the zygote such that when two heterologs are lost at a somatic cleavage division, almost invariably one daughter nucleus fails to get either, and the other daughter nucleus receives its normal chromosome complement. It is suggested that this asymmetry is not a property of pal but is rather a normal process that is being revealed by the mutant. (6) The somatic loss of chromosomes in the progeny of pal males allows the construction of fate maps of the blastoderm. Similar fate maps are obtained using data from gynandromorphs and from marked Y chromosome (nonsexually dimorphic) mosaics.  相似文献   

4.
5.
In mammals, the X and Y chromosomes are subject to meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI) during prophase I in the male germline, but their status thereafter is currently unclear. An abundance of X-linked spermatogenesis genes has spawned the view that the X must be active . On the other hand, the idea that the imprinted paternal X of the early embryo may be preinactivated by MSCI suggests that silencing may persist longer . To clarify this issue, we establish a comprehensive X-expression profile during mouse spermatogenesis. Here, we discover that the X and Y occupy a novel compartment in the postmeiotic spermatid and adopt a non-Rabl configuration. We demonstrate that this postmeiotic sex chromatin (PMSC) persists throughout spermiogenesis into mature sperm and exhibits epigenetic similarity to the XY body. In the spermatid, 87% of X-linked genes remain suppressed postmeiotically, while autosomes are largely active. We conclude that chromosome-wide X silencing continues from meiosis to the end of spermiogenesis, and we discuss implications for proposed mechanisms of imprinted X-inactivation.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Meneely PM  Farago AF  Kauffman TM 《Genetics》2002,162(3):1169-1177
Regulation of both the number and the location of crossovers during meiosis is important for normal chromosome segregation. We used sequence-tagged site polymorphisms to examine the distribution of all crossovers on the X chromosome during oogenesis and on one autosome during both oogenesis and spermatogenesis in Caenorhabditis elegans. The X chromosome has essentially one crossover during oogenesis, with only three possible double crossover exceptions among 220 recombinant X chromosomes. All three had one of the two crossovers in the same chromosomal interval, suggesting that crossovers in that interval do not cause interference. No other interval was associated with double crossovers. Very high interference was also found on an autosome during oogenesis, implying that each chromosome has only one crossover during oogenesis. During spermatogenesis, recombination on this autosome was reduced by approximately 30% compared to oogenesis, but the relative distribution of the residual crossovers was only slightly different. In contrast to previous results with other autosomes, no double crossover chromosomes were observed. Despite an increased frequency of nonrecombinant chromosomes, segregation of a nonrecombinant autosome during spermatogenesis appears to occur normally. This indicates that an achiasmate segregation system helps to ensure faithful disjunction of autosomes during spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
A model is presented for the evolution of the sciarid chromosomal system. In this model, a driving X chromosome caused female-biased sex ratios. The drive was exploited by maternal autosomes that segregated with the X at spermatogenesis. Genes in mothers converted some of their XX daughters into sons by eliminating a paternal X from the embryonic soma. L chromosomes were derived from X chromosomes and favored male-biased sex ratios. An X' chromosome arose that suppressed the effects of L chromosomes. The 1:1 sex ratio is a stalemate between the X' and X'X mothers causing all-female broods and the L chromosomes in XX mothers causing all-male broods. Any element (such as an L chromosome) that is preferentially transmitted through one sex will be selected to bias the sex ratio towards this sex.  相似文献   

9.
K'ergaard AV  Mamon LA 《Genetika》2007,43(10):1379-1387
Nondisjunction and loss of sex chromosomes caused by exposure of male Drosophila melanogaster to heat shock (HS) (37 degrees C for 1 h) has been studied to determine the role of mutation l(1)ts403 (sbr10) in the control of chromosome segregation during cell division. Hyperthermia of males at the pupal stage has been demonstrated to increase the number of offspring with abnormalities of not only paternal, but also maternal sex chromosome sets. According to the criterion used, there is a temperature-sensitive period of spermatogenesis, which presumably coincides with meiosis. Phenotypes of some individuals correspond to the presence of two sex chromosomes of obtained from the same parent. The frequency of abnormal chromosome sets in the offspring of male carriers of the sbr10 mutation is about two times higher than in the offspring of males without this mutation.  相似文献   

10.
A. E. Zitron  R. S. Hawley 《Genetics》1989,122(4):801-821
We describe the isolation and characterization of Aberrant X segregation (Axs), a dominant female-specific meiotic mutation. Although Axs has little or no effect on the frequency or distribution of exchange, or on the disjunction of exchange bivalents, nonexchange X chromosomes undergo nondisjunction at high frequencies in Axs/+ and Axs/Axs females. This increased X chromosome nondisjunction is shown to be a consequence of an Axs-induced defect in distributive segregation. In Axs-bearing females, fourth chromosome nondisjunction is observed only in the presence of nonexchange X chromosomes and is argued to be the result of improper X and fourth chromosome associations within the distributive system. In XX females bearing a compound fourth chromosome, the frequency of nonhomologous disjunction of the X chromosomes from the compound fourth chromosome is shown to account for at least 80% of the total X nondisjunction observed. In addition, Axs diminishes or ablates the capacity of nonexchange X chromosomes to form trivalents in females bearing either a Y chromosome or a small free duplication for the X. Axs also impairs compound X from Y segregation. The effect of Axs on these segregations parallels the defects observed for homologous nonexchange X chromosome disjunction in Axs females. In addition to its dramatic effects on the X chromosome, Axs exerts a similar effect on the segregation of a major autosome. We conclude that Axs defines a locus required for proper homolog disjunction within the distributive system.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanisms of aneuploidy induction in human oogenesis mainly involve nondisjunction arising during the first and second meiotic divisions. Nondisjunction equally affects both whole chromosomes and chromatids, in the latter case it is facilitated by "predivision" or precocious centromere division. Karyotyping and CGH studies show an excess of hypohaploidy, which is confirmed in studies of preimplantation embryos, providing evidence in favour of anaphase lag as a mechanism. Preferential involvement of the smaller autosomes has been clearly shown but the largest chromosomes are also abnormal in many cases. Overall, the rate of chromosomal imbalance in oocytes from women aged between 30 and 35 has been estimated at 11% from recent karyotyping data but accruing CGH results suggest that the true figure should be considerably higher. Clear evidence has been obtained in favour of germinal or gonadal mosaicism as a predisposing factor. Constitutional aneuploidy in embryos is most frequent for chromosomes 22, 16, 21 and 15; least frequently involved are chromosomes 14, X and Y, and 6. However, embryos of women under 37 are far more likely to be affected by mosaic aneuploidy, which is present in over 50% of 3-day-old embryos. There are two main types, diploid/aneuploid and chaotic mosaics. Chaotic mosaics arise independently of maternal age and may be related to centrosome anomalies and hence of male origin. Aneuploid mosaics most commonly arise by chromosome loss, followed by chromosome gain and least frequently by mitotic nondisjunction. All may be related to maternal age as well as to lack of specific gene products in the embryo. Partial aneuploidy as a result of chromosome breakage affects a minimum of 10% of embryos.  相似文献   

12.
Cytogenetic studies have shown that bandicoots (family Peramelidae) eliminate one X chromosome in females and the Y chromosome in males from some somatic tissues at different stages during development. The discovery of a polymorphism for X-linked phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK-1) in a population of Isoodon obesulus from Mount Gambier, South Australia, has allowed us to answer a number of long standing questions relating to the parental source of the eliminated X chromosome, X chromosome inactivation and reactivation in somatic and germ cells of female bandicoots. We have found no evidence of paternal PGK-1 allele expression in a wide range of somatic tissues and cell types from known female heterozygotes. We conclude that paternal X chromosome inactivation occurs in bandicoots as in other marsupial groups and that it is the paternally derived X chromosome that is eliminated from some cell types of females. The absence of PGK-1 paternal activity in somatic cells allowed us to examine the state of X chromosome activity in germ cells. Electrophoresis of germ cells from different aged pouch young heterozygotes showed only maternal allele expression in oogonia whereas an additional paternally derived band was observed in pre-dictyate oocytes. We conclude that reactivation of the inactive X chromosome occurs around the onset of meiosis in female bandicoots. As in other mammals, late replication is a common feature of the Y chromosome in male and the inactive X chromosome in female bandicoots. The basis of sex chromosome loss is still not known; however later timing of DNA synthesis is involved. Our finding that the paternally derived X chromosome is eliminated in females suggests that late DNA replication may provide the imprint for paternal X inactivation and the elimination of sex chromosomes in bandicoots.  相似文献   

13.
The programmed elimination of part of the genome through chromosome loss or chromatin diminution constitutes an exceptional biological process found to be present in several diverse groups of organisms. The occurrence of this phenomenon during early embryogenesis is generally correlated to somatic versus germ-line differentiation. A most outstanding example of chromosome elimination and genomic imprinting is found in sciarid flies, where whole chromosomes of exclusive parental origin are selectively eliminated at different developmental stages. Three types of tissue-specific chromosome elimination events occur in sciarids. During early cleavages, one or two X paternal chromosomes is/are discarded from somatic cells of embryos which then develop as females or males respectively. Thus, the sex of the embryo is determined by the number of eliminated paternal X chromosomes. In germ cells, instead, a single paternal X chromosome is eliminated in embryos of both sexes. In addition, while female meiosis is orthodox, male meiosis is highly unusual as the whole paternal chromosome set is discarded from spermatocytes. As a consequence, only maternally derived chromosomes are included in the functional sperm. This paper reviews current cytological and molecular knowledge on the tissue-specific cell mechanisms evolved to achieve chromosome elimination in sciarids.  相似文献   

14.
Light and electron microscopy evidence have been obtained to describe the peculiar spermatogenesis in the collembolan species Sminthurus viridis and Allacma fusca (Sminthuridae). In these two species, the two sexes differ for the lack of two chromosomes (the sex chromosomes) in males (males, 2n = 10; females, 2n = 12). While oogenesis seems to proceed normally, spermatogenesis is peculiar because the two daughter cells of the first meiotic division have different chromosome numbers (six and four). The cell receiving four chromosomes degenerates, while the cell receiving six chromosomes completes meiosis and produces identical spermatozoa (n = 6). At fertilization, pronuclei with six chromosomes fuse together to form zygotes with 2n = 12. Male embryos must lose two sex chromosomes during the first zygotic mitosis, as all male cells have 2n = 10 chromosomes. The sex chromosome system of these species can be identified as X1X1X2X2:X1X20. Electron microscopy observations show that the same peculiar spermatogenesis occurs also in two others species of the same family, Caprainea marginata and Lipothrix lubbocki. The peculiar sex determination system described is similar but not identical to what is observed in other insect orders, and it may represent an evolutionary step toward parthenogenesis. It is suggested that this peculiar spermatogenesis is common to all Symphypleona.  相似文献   

15.
In men, translocations involving sex chromosomes usually result in azoospermia or sometimes oligospermia. We report the case of a man with oligospermia with a 46,Y,t(X;2)(p21;p25.3) translocation and the specific modalities of management of the couple before ICSI. After genetic counselling, we proposed spermatozoa chromosomal analysis using FISH to evaluate the mode of segregation of the translocation and the risk for the embryo and descendants. This study showed that 34% of spermatozoa were normal or balanced for the chromosomes studied, and 66% of spermatozoa presented a chromosome imbalance related to the translocation and/or involving X and Y chromosome non-disjuction. In view of this result, we decided to perform another FISH analysis to define the increased risk related to the non-disjunction of X and Y chromosomes. Only 60% of 1,000 spermatozoa were normal for X and Y. The chromosome risk for the offspring is not limited to the translocation, as the risk of Klinefelter and Turner syndrome is also increased. In view of these results and the woman's age (42 years old), we advised the couple against ICSI at another genetic counselling session. This case illustrates the value of spermatozoa FISH analysis to evaluate the consequences of a translocation on spermatogenesis. The study should not be limited to the translocation alone, but should also evaluate anomalies of non-disjunction of sex chromosomes that are frequent during normal spermatogenesis, but the risk increases in the case of translocations, especially involving the sex chromosomes.  相似文献   

16.
J. Tomkiel  S. Pimpinelli    L. Sandler 《Genetics》1991,128(3):583-594
The euchromatic maternal-effect mutation abnormal oocyte (abo), of Drosophila melanogaster interacts with regions of heterochromatin known as ABO, which reside on the X, Y and second chromosomes. Here, we show that survival of progeny from abo females depends in part upon the maternal dosage of ABO heterochromatin. A comparison was made of the recovery of genotypically identical progeny from abo mothers bearing sex chromosomes of various ABO contents. The results show that the recovery of daughters was decreased if mothers were ABO-/ABO-. However, no decrease was observed if mothers were ABO+/ABO-. In addition, the survival of daughters was greater when they received an ABO-X chromosome from an ABO-/ABO+ mother rather than the father. We suggest that these results reflect a complementation or interaction between the ABO-deficient X and the ABO heterochromatin in the maternal genome. This proposed interaction could occur early in oogenesis in the mother or prior to completion of meiosis I in the fertilized egg. To determine if zygotic dosage of ABO heterochromatin might also be important at very early stages of embryogenesis, we examined the timing of zygotic rescue by paternally donated ABO heterochromatin using a second mutation, paternal loss (pal). Homozygous pal males produce progeny which lose paternally derived chromosomes during the early zygotic divisions. Zygotes that have lost a paternal sex chromosome in a fraction of their nuclei will be mosaic for the amount of ABO heterochromatin. By monitoring the recovery of pal-induced mosaics from abo and abo+ females, we could determine the temporal and spatial requirements for ABO function. Results show that the survival of progeny from the abo maternal-effect lethality was increased if ABO heterochromatin was present prior to the pal-induced loss event. Analysis of mosaic patterns did not reveal a specific lethal focus. We conclude from these results that ABO heterochromatin serves its vital function prior to completion of the early cleavage divisions in progeny of abo mothers.  相似文献   

17.
Compared with autosomes, the X chromosome shows different patterns of evolution as a result of its hemizygosity in males. Additionally, inactivation of the X during spermatogenesis can make the X chromosome an unfavorable location for male-specific genes. These factors can help to explain why in many species gene content of the X chromosome differs from that of autosomes. Indeed, the X chromosome in mouse is enriched for male-specific genes while they are depleted on the X in Drosophila but show neither of these trends in mosquito. Here, we will discuss recent findings on the ancestral and neo-X chromosomes in Drosophila that support sexual antagonism as a force shaping gene content evolution of sex chromosomes and suggest that selection could be driving male-biased genes off the X.  相似文献   

18.
In imprinting, homologous chromosomes behave differently during development according to their parental origin. Typically, paternally derived chromosomes are preferentially inactivated or eliminated. Examples of such phenomena include inactivation of the mammalian X chromosome, inactivation or elimination of one haploid chromosome set in male coccids, and elimination of paternal X chromosomes in the fly Sciara. It has generally been thought that the paternal chromosomes bear an imprint leading to their inactivation or elimination. However, alteration of the parental origin of chromosomes, as in the study of parthenogenotes in mammals and coccids, shows that passage of chromosomes through a male germ cell or fertilization is not essential for inactivation or elimination. It appears that neither chromosome set is programmed to resist or undergo inactivation. Instead the two sets differ in relative sensitivity, and the question is whether the maternal set have an imprint for resistance, or the paternal set one for susceptibility. Very early in development of mammals both X chromosomes are active. This makes it simpler to envisage the maternal X bearing an imprint for resistance to inactivation, which persists through the early developmental period. Similar considerations also apply in coccids and Sciara. Thus, imprinting should be regarded as a phenomenon conferred on the maternal chromosomes in the oocyte. This permits simpler models for the mechanism of X-inactivation, and weakens the case for evolution of X-inactivation from an earlier form of inactivation during male gametogenesis. One may speculate whether imprinting affects timing of gene action in development.  相似文献   

19.
Previous studies on early female mouse embryos revealed the presence of two kinds of inactive X chromosomes, one replicating late and the other early in the DNA synthetic period. The X chromosome that replicates early is of special interest because of its paternal origin, preferential occurrence in trophectoderm and primitive endoderm derivatives, and programmed shift to the late replicator. This study by BrdU labeling and acridine orange fluorescence staining was undertaken to examine whether the inactive X chromosome behaves in a similar manner in other laboratory mammals. In rat embryos the paternal X chromosome was found to show the same behavior in extraembryonic tissues. Early replicating chromosomes were also found in the extraembryonic regions of Chinese hamster and rabbit embryos, although their parental origin could not be determined due to the absent of X chromosome polymorphism in these species. Probably the early replicating X chromosome occurs commonly in mammals. Its functional significance is unknown.  相似文献   

20.
In eutherian mammals, the X and Y chromosomes undergo meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI) during spermatogenesis in males. However, following fertilization, both the paternally (Xp) and maternally (Xm) inherited X chromosomes are active in the inner cell mass of the female blastocyst, and then random inactivation of one X chromosome occurs in each cell, leading to a mosaic pattern of X-chromosome activity in adult female tissues. In contrast, marsupial females show a nonrandom pattern of X chromosome activity, with repression of the Xp in all somatic tissues. Here, we show that MSCI also occurs during spermatogenesis in marsupials in a manner similar to, but more stable than that in eutherians. These findings support the suggestion that MSCI may have provided the basis for an early dosage compensation mechanism in mammals based solely on gametogenic events, and that random X-chromosome inactivation during embryogenesis may have evolved subsequently in eutherian mammals.  相似文献   

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