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1.
In seven mammalian species, including man, the position and number of nucleoli in pachytene spermatocyte nuclei were studied from electron microscope (EM) nuclear sections or bivalent microspreads. The number and position of the nucleolar organiser regions (NORs) in mitotic and meiotic chromosomes were also analysed, using silver staining techniques and in situ hybridisation protocols. The general organisation of pachytene spermatocyte nucleoli was almost the same, with only minor morphological differences between species. The terminal NORs of Thylamys elegans (Didelphoidea, Marsupialia), Dromiciops gliroides (Microbiotheridae, Marsupialia), Phyllotys osgoodi (Rodentia, Muridae) and man, always gave rise to peripheral nucleoli in the spermatocyte nucleus. In turn, the intercalated NORs from Octodon degus, Ctenomys opimus (Rodentia, Octodontidae) and Chinchilla lanigera (Rodentia, Cavidae), gave rise to central nucleoli. In species with a single nucleolar bivalent, just one nucleolus is formed, while in those with multiple nucleolar bivalents a variable number of nucleoli are formed by association of different nucleolar bivalents or NORs that occupy the same nuclear peripheral space (Phyllotis and man). It can be concluded that the position of each nucleolus within the spermatocyte nucleus is mainly dependent upon: (1) the position of the NOR in the nucleolar bivalent synaptonemal complex (SC), (2) the nuclear pathway of the nucleolar bivalent SC, being both telomeric ends attached to the nuclear envelope, and (3) the association between nucleolar bivalents by means of their NOR-nucleolar domains that occupy the same nuclear space. Thus, the distribution of nucleoli within the nuclear space of spermatocytes is non-random and it is consistent with the existence of a species-specific meiotic nuclear architecture.  相似文献   

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Understanding the spatial organization of the chromosomes in meiotic nuclei is crucial to our knowledge of the genome's functional regulation, stability and evolution. This study examined the nuclear architecture of Mus domesticus 2n=40 pachytene spermatocytes, analyzing the associations among autosomal bivalents via their Centromere Telomere Complexes (CTC). The study developed a nuclear model in which each CTC was represented as a 3D computer object. The probability of a given combination of associations among CTC was estimated by simulating a random distribution of 19 indistinguishable CTC over n indistinguishable "cells" on the nuclear envelope. The estimated association frequencies resulting from this numerical approach were similar to those obtained by quantifying actual associations in pachytene spermatocyte spreads. The nuclear localization and associations of CTC through the meiotic prophase in well-preserved nuclei were also analyzed. We concluded that throughout the meiotic prophase: 1) the CTC of autosomal bivalents are not randomly distributed in the nuclear space; 2) the CTC associate amongst themselves, probably at random, over a small surface of the nuclear envelope, at the beginning of the meiotic prophase; 3) the initial aggregation of centromere regions occurring in lepto-zygotene likely resolves into several smaller aggregates according to patterns of preferential partitioning; 4) these smaller aggregates spread over the inner face of the nuclear envelope, remaining stable until advanced stages of the meiotic prophase or even until the first meiotic division.  相似文献   

6.
Chiasma frequency,distribution and interference maps of mouse autosomes   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Chiasma frequencies were analysed and chiasma positions measured in diakinesis/metaphase I autosomal bivalents from oocytes and spermatocytes of F1 hybrid C3H/HeH×101/H mice. Twenty chromosome size ranks, including the presumptive X bivalent, could be distinguished in oocytes, and nineteen autosomal ranks plus the XY pair spermatocytes. Overall, mean cell chiasma frequencies of the two sexes did not differ significantly once the contribution of the presumptive X bivalent and the XY pair were taken into account. Sex related differences in chiasma distribution patterns were evident, however. In monochiasmate bivalents, the chiasma was most commonly located interstitially in oocytes while in spermatocytes it could be either interstitial or distal. In dichiasmate bivalents, the chiasmata tended to be more centrally located in oocytes than in spermatocytes. Minimum inter-chiasma distances did not appear to show any great variation in chromosome pairs of different sizes, however, mean inter-chiasma distances did increase with the bivalent length. The minimum-inter chiasma distance data suggest that chiasma interference is complete over a chromosomal segment equating to approximately 60 Mb. Measurement of the positions of chiasmata along chromosome arms open up the possibility of producing chiasma-based genetic maps for all the autosomes of the mouse.  相似文献   

7.
Pairing of pachytene chromosomes was studied in oocytes and spermatocytes of mice heterozygous for the male-sterile Is(7;1)40H insertion using light and electron microscopy for synaptonemal complex analysis in surface-spread, silver-stained preparations. The data comprised four males and four female embryos. The insertion/deletion configurations appeared as either two bivalents or one quadrivalent in both sexes, but the proportion of bivalents was higher in oocytes. Some insertion and deletion bivalents showed synaptic adjustment. The insertion/deletion configurations were associated with, or adjacent to, the XY bivalent in the majority of spermatocytes. End-to-end association of different bivalents was more frequent in oocytes than in spermatocytes. It is suggested that physiological differences between male and female gametocytes may lead to the difference in their reproductive potential.The authors warmly dedicate this paper to the Founder and Senior Editor of Chromosoma, Professor Hans Bauer, on the occasion of his 80th birthday.  相似文献   

8.
Complete reconstruction of the synaptonemal complex in 12 pachytene (defined here as that stage in which the synaptonemal complex is continuous throughout the bivalents) nuclei from one wild-type germarium has permitted the following observations. 1) Drosophila melanogaster bivalents at pachytene exhibit a chromocentral arrangement; the pericentric heterochromatin of all bivalents lies in one region of the nucleus, the chromocenter. Telomeric ends do not appear to abutt the nuclear envelope. 2) Synaptonemal complex is present in the pericentric heterochromatin; however, it is morphologically distinct from that present in the euchromatic portion of the bivalents. 3) Length of the synaptonemal complex of the bivalent arms is greatest at early pachytene; the synaptonemal complex then becomes progressively shorter. Minimum length is approximately one-half of the maximum. 4) Decrease in length of synaptonemal complex is accompanied by an increase in thickness. Reconstruction of 20 pachytene nuclei from an additional 8 germaria suggests that these observations are typical. Correlations between these cytological observations and genetic observations (e.g., patterns of crossing-over) are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
C. B. Gillies 《Chromosoma》1972,36(2):119-130
Serial sections from isolated asci were used to reconstruct the seven pachytene bivalents of Neurospora crassa. The synaptonemal complex could be traced for its whole length in each bivalent, being attached to the nuclear envelope at both ends in six. The satellite end of the nucleolar chromosome did not appear to be attached to the nuclear envelope. The estimated lengths of the bivalents ranged from 10.7 to 5.1 microns in one nucleus, from 11.5 to 4.2 microns in another, and from 8.5 to 4.4 microns in a third, with total haploid complement lengths of 45.5 microns, 47.3 microns, and 43.9 microns respectively. These values are considerably smaller than published light microscopical measurements.—The synaptonemal complex in N. crassa, as in other ascomycetes, has two banded ca. 400 Å wide lateral components held about 1200 Å apart by a central region containing the ca. 200 Å wide central component. With normal glutaraldehyde/OsO4-phosphate buffered fixation the chromatin of the pachytene bivalents is poorly contrasted. Occasional local thickenings of the central component into electron dense nodes ca. 1000 × 500 Å in longitudinal section are characteristic of the complex.  相似文献   

10.
XYY spermatogenesis in XO/XY/XYY mosaic mice   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The relative frequencies of XYY and XY cells in XO/XY/XYY mosaic mice were compared between somatic cells (bone marrow) and spermatogonia, and between spermatogonia and pachytene or MI spermatocytes. The results indicated there was no selection either for or against XYY spermatogonia. There was, however, a strong selection against XYY spermatocytes during pachytene, with their almost total elimination by the first meiotic metaphase. At pachytene, most XYY cells had trivalent or X univalent/YY bivalent configurations. These findings are contrasted with previous studies of XYY spermatogenesis in mice and are discussed with respect to a model that invokes sex-chromosome univalence as the cause of XYY spermatogenic failure.  相似文献   

11.
Plethodontid salamanders in the genus Oedipina are characterized by a strongly heteromorphic sex-determining pair of X/Y chromosomes. The telocentric X chromosome and the subtelocentric Y chromosome are clearly distinguished from the autosomes and their behavior during meiosis can be sequentially followed in squash preparations of spermatocytes. In Oedipina the sex chromosomes are not obscured by an opaque sex vesicle during early meiotic stages, making it possible to observe details of sex bivalent structure and behavior not directly visible in other vertebrate groups. The sex chromosomes can first be distinguished from autosomal bivalents at the conclusion of zygotene, with X and Y synapsed only along a short segment at their non-centromeric ends, forming a bivalent that contrasts sharply with the completely synapsed autosomes. During pachytene, the XY bivalent becomes progressively shortened and more compact, disappearing as a visible structure when pachytene progresses into the diffuse stage of male meiosis. Diplotene bivalents gradually emerge from the diffuse nuclei, presumably by the return of the loops of chromatin into their respective chromomeres. During early diplotene, the X/Y bivalent is clearly visible with a single chiasma within the synapsed segment. This chiasma is terminalized by first meiotic metaphase with the X and Y appearing either in end-to-end synaptic contact or as univalents separated at opposite poles relative to the equatorially distributed autosomal bivalents. In C-banded preparations, the Y is entirely heterochromatic while the X contains a large centromeric C-band and another block of heterochromatin located at the telomeric end, in the region of synapsis with the Y. We find no cytological evidence of dosage compensation, such as differential staining of the X chromosomes or Barr bodies, in mitotic or interphase cells from female animals.  相似文献   

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C. B. Gillies 《Chromosoma》1973,43(2):145-176
Aldehyde fixation followed by staining with phosphotungstic acid produces differential contrast between the synaptonemal complex and the chromatin of maize pachytene bivalents. Centromeres, heterochromatic knobs and large chromomeres are easily recognised. With this and other staining techniques the nucleolus organizer region can be differentiated into two components. — Microsporocyte nuclei at pachytene were serially sectioned and all ten bivalents reconstructed in five nuclei. An idiogram was derived from the mean chromosome (= synaptonemal complex) lengths, the arm ratios, positions of knobs and the nucleolus organizer region. The idiogram agrees well with that published from light microscopic analyses. However, bivalent lengths are only two thirds of those observed by light microscopy of squash preparations. Many telomeres of the bivalents are connected via chromatin to the nuclear envelope, but a varying number of free bivalent ends are observed in all five reconstructed nuclei. — Bivalents heterozygous for inversion 3b were reconstructed. In the presence of abnormal chromosome 10 (K10) the lateral components of the synaptonemal complex of chromosome 3 formed a typical inversion loop, while in one of the nuclei having no K10 the two lateral components of the long arms of chromosome 3 remained unpaired in the region of inversion heterozygosity. The presence of K10, which increases crossing-over frequencies and promotes intimate pairing at the light microscopic level, was thus found to permit formation of complete synaptonemal complexes in the inverted region. The extra terminal portion of the K10 chromosome folded back on itself and formed a morphologically normal synaptonemal complex in this — possibly non-homologously paired — region. The chromatin of centromeres and knobs from different bivalents were sometimes found to fuse, but the synaptonemal complexes transversing the fused centromeres or knobs retained their individuality.  相似文献   

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Normal synaptonemal complexes (SCs), consisting of two lateral elements and a central element, are present in wild-type, him-4 and him-8 mutant strains in both hermaphrodites and males of Caenorhabditis elegans. Thus, the increase in rate of nondisjunction in the him mutants is not related to aberrant SC morphology. The wild-type hermaphrodite has six SCs, as determined from 3-D reconstruction analysis of serial sections from electron microscopy. Thus, n = 6 and this confirms early reports based on cytological studies with the light microscope. Only one end of the SC is attached to the nuclear envelope while the other end is free in the nucleoplasm and there is no apparent bouquet formation. Either end of the SC can attach to the nuclear envelope. The pairing behavior of the XX bivalent is normal and occurs synchronously with the autosomes. Electron dense bodies, or knobs, are associated with the SC via the central element and displace the chromatin for a distance of 200 nm. Each pachytene nucleus of the wild-type hermaphrodite has six such structures that are randomly dispersed along the bivalents such that some SCs have one or two knobs while others have none. Their function is unknown.  相似文献   

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Background

The nuclear architecture of meiotic prophase spermatocytes is based on higher-order patterns of spatial associations among chromosomal domains from different bivalents. The meiotic nuclear architecture depends on the chromosome characteristics and consequently is prone to modification by chromosomal rearrangements. In this work, we consider Mus domesticus spermatocytes with diploid chromosome number 2n = 40, all telocentric, and investigate a possible modification of the ancestral nuclear architecture due to the emergence of derived Rb chromosomes, which may be present in the homozygous or heterozygous condition.

Results

In the 2n = 40 spermatocyte nuclei random associations mediated by pericentromeric heterochromatin among the 19 telocentric bivalents ocurr at the nuclear periphery. The observed frequency of associations among them, made distinguishable by specific probes and FISH, seems to be the same for pairs that may or may not form Rb chromosomes. In the homozygote Rb 2n = 24 spermatocytes, associations also mediated by pericentromeric heterochromatin occur mainly between the three telocentric or the eight metacentric bivalents themselves. In heterozygote Rb 2n = 32 spermatocytes all heterochromatin is localized at the nuclear periphery, yet associations are mainly observed among the three telocentric bivalents and between the asynaptic axes of the trivalents.

Conclusions

The Rb chromosomes pose sharp restrictions for interactions in the 2n = 24 and 2n = 32 spermatocytes, as compared to the ample possibilities for interactions between bivalents in the 2n = 40 spermatocytes. Undoubtedly the emergence of Rb chromosomes changes the ancestral nuclear architecture of 2n = 40 spermatocytes since they establish new types of interactions among chromosomal domains, particularly through centromeric and heterochromatic regions at the nuclear periphery among telocentric and at the nuclear center among Rb metacentric ones.  相似文献   

18.
Synaptonemal complexes (SCs), X and Y axes, and various nucleolar structures stain preferentially with silver in surface microspread preparations and are analyzable by both light and electron microscopy. Central elements, kinetochore region material and nuclear annuli which stain with ethanolic phosphotungstic acid are seldom visible after silver staining. SCs can be characterized by length measurements equally well in light and electron micrographs, from which stages of pachytene can also be determined by differentiation of the axes of the XY pair. By electron microscopy, the lateral elements appear as single strands at zygotene and early pachytene, then become double in a plane perpendicular to that of the SC and appear denser and thicker until late pachytene when they become progressively more attenuated and again appear single. These transitions are difficult to explain in terms of separation of associated chromatids. Identification of various silver stained bodies as nucleoli is supported by their orange-red fluorescence with acridine orange. SCs, X and Y axes and associated sex body material are, with a few exceptions, virtually indistinguishable from the background yellow-green fluorescence of the chromatin. Comet-shaped nucleolar bodies are regularly associated with five (in one animal) or six (in two animals) SCs; their positions along particular SCs identifiable by relative lengths indicate these bodies to be expressions of nucleolus organizer regions. They first appear at leptotene in association with unpaired axes and undergo progressive changes through late pachytene, at which time they redistribute their contents coincident with disappearance of the SCs. A characteristic nucleolar double dense body appears at zygotene; unlike the comet-shaped nucleoli, it is unassociated with other nuclear structures, and is assumed to arise from coalescence of previously existing smaller dense bodies. — The silver staining method described is remarkable for the speed and simplicity with which large numbers of spermatocyte nuclei are obtainable for light and electron microscopy. The fidelity of the light microscopic counterpart of the electron microscopic image has been directly assessed at different stages of pachytene. For cytogenetic analysis, critical information often lies beyond the limits of light optical resolution; the correlated electron microscopy required for verification is easily obtained with this method.This paper is warmly dedicated to Professor Hans Bauer on the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday and as our expression of gratitude and admiration for his lasting contributions to chromosome biology  相似文献   

19.
Xie Y  Li F  Zhang C  Yu K  Xiang J 《Tissue & cell》2008,40(5):343-350
A modified surface spreading technique for synaptonemal complex (SC) analysis was tested to assess the process of chromosome synapsis in spermatocytes of diploid and induced triploid Fenneropenaeus chinensis. Spermatocytes of diploid shrimp showed typical morphological characteristics of eukaryote SC, with complete synapsis of bivalents. No recognizable bivalent associated with sex chromosomes was observed in spermatocytes of diploid shrimp. However, differences in morphology of SC, including unsynapsed univalents, bivalents, totally paired trivalents with non-homologous synapsis, partner switches and triple synapsis were identified at early pachytene stage of triploid spermatocytes. Triple synapsis was especially common at late pachytene stage in spermatocytes of triploid shrimp. The observed abnormal synapsis behavior of chromosomes in spermatocytes indicated that triploid male shrimp may find it difficult to develop normal haploid sperm.  相似文献   

20.
Crossing over is absent in oocytes of the silkworm, Bombyx mori. Synaptonemal complexes are present during pachytene between the paired chromosomes. At leptotene, lateral components of the synaptonemal complex are attached in a bouquet to a limited region of the nuclear envelope. Before completion of lateral components, synaptonemal complex formation begins at the nuclear envelope. With synaptonemal complex formation proceeding from both ends bivalents occasionally become interlocked. After pairing is completed, the bouquet arrangement is dissolved possibly as a result of a flow of the inner membrane of the nuclear envelope thereby separating the telomeres. After the telomeres are released from the nuclear envelope, material is deposited onto the lateral components of the synaptonemal complex. The modified synaptonemal complexes are retained by the bivalents until metaphase I. It is suggested that these modified synaptonemal complexes substitute for chiasmata in order to ensure regular disjunction of homologous chromosomes in the absence of crossing over.  相似文献   

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