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1.
D. G. Bedo 《Chromosoma》1980,77(3):299-308
In Lucilia cuprina C-banding produces procentric bands on all autosomes and deep staining over most of the X and Y chromosomes which conciderably facilitates the analysis of complex Y chromosome rearrangements. The Y chromosome is generally darkly C-banded throughout while in the X chromosome a pale staining segment is found in the distal portion of the long arm. Modulation of the banding reaction results in grey areas in both X and Y. When C-banding is compared with allocycly it is clear that not all heteropycnotic regions in the sex chromosomes C-band to the same extent. Secondary constrictions in the short arms of both X and Y chromosomes are clearly revealed by C-banding, the X satellite being polymorphic for size.— Q-banding results in a brightly fluorescing band in the short arm of structurally normal Y chromosomes. This band loses its fluorescence in some translocations, probably through a position effect. Hoechst 33258 staining does not produce any brightly fluorescing bands.  相似文献   

2.
In situ denaturation of metaphase chromosomes with alkali results in a shift from green to yellow, orange, brown and red fluorescence with acridine orange, indicating increasing denaturation of chromosomal DNA. The kinetics and characteristics of denaturation are described. Mouse and Microtus agrestis chromosomes denature uniformly but human cells show sequential denaturation. With increasing concentrations of alkali, the secondary constrictions in chromosomes 1, 9 and 16 are the first, and the distal half of the Y chromosome the last, to become denatured. — Reassociation of chromosomal DNA occurs within seconds after the start of incubation in salt solution. Areas containing repetitious DNA, e.g. mouse centromeres, fluoresce much more strongly than other regions with acridine orange after prolonged reassociation. Since human and Microtus centromeric regions behave similarly, it is proposed that they, too, contain repetitious DNA. — Reassociation treatment leads to enhancement of bright quinacrine mustard fluorescence in regions already bright before treatment. Furthermore, regions containing repetitious DNA, e.g. the secondary constrictions in human chromosomes 1, 9 and 16, whose fluorescence is dull before treatment, turn bright after reassociation. — The methods of fluorescence analysis of mammalian chromosomes with acridine orange and quinacrine mustard permit the localization and study of different classes of chromosomal DNA.  相似文献   

3.
Hoechst 33258 banding of Drosophila nasutoides metaphase chromosomes   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Hoechst 33258 banding of D. nasutoides metaphase chromosomes is described and compared with Q and C bands. The C band positive regions of the euchromatic autosomes, the X and the Y fluoresce brightly, as is typical of Drosophila and other species. The fluorescence pattern of the large heterochromatic chromosome is atypical, however. Contrary to the observations on other species, the C negative bands of the large heterochromatic chromosome are brightly fluorescent with both Hoechst 33258 and quinacrine. Based on differences in the various banding patterns, four classes of heterochromatin are described in the large heterochromatic chromosome and it is suggested that each class may correspond to an AT-rich DNA satellite.  相似文献   

4.
Daunomycin and adriamycin were previously found to produce Q-like banding patterns on chromosomes. The interaction of several anthracyclines with both natural and synthetic DNAs and chromosomes has been investigated in more detail. Daunomycin fluorescence is almost completely quenched by natural DNAs with varying base composition from 31 to 72% G-C and by the alternating polymer poly-d(G-C)·poly-d(G-C). In contrast, daunomycin fluorescence is quenched by only 50% when the dye interacts with synthetic A-T polymers. Thus, differential quenching of daunomycin fluorescence can account for the production of bright bands at contiguous A-T sequences along the chromosome. Slight differences in fluorescence quenching between the repeating and homopolymeric A-T duplex DNAs were observed which can be attributed to differences in affinity of daunomycin for these DNAs. The aminosugar moiety of daunomycin, daunosamine, increases the binding of daunomycin to DNA and also enhances chromosome banding. — Nogalamycin, which displays no differential quenching with the different DNAs in solution, also fails to produce bands on chromosomes. — These findings suggest that non-random nucleotide sequence arrangements along the chromosome are a basic determinant for dye interaction to produce the observed banding patterns. Specific banding procedures may determine the accessibility of these sites within the chromosomal DNA.  相似文献   

5.
Prophase chromosomes of Drosophila hydei were stained with 0.5 g/ml Hoechst 33258 and examined under a fluorescence microscope. While autosomal and X chromosome heterochromatin are homogeneously fluorescent, the entirely heterochromatic Y chromosome exhibits an extremely fine longitudinal differentiation, being subdivided into 18 different regions defined by the degree of fluorescence and the presence of constrictions. Thus high resolution Hoechst banding of prophase chromosomes provides a tool comparable to polytene chromosomes for the cytogenetic analysis of the Y chromosome of D. hydei. — D. hydei heterochromatin was further characterized by Hoechst staining of chromosomes exposed to 5-bromodeoxyuridine for one round of DNA replication. After this treatment the pericentromeric autosomal heterochromatin, the X heterochromatin and the Y chromosome exhibit numerous regions of lateral asymmetry. Moreover, while the heterochromatic short arms of the major autosomes show simple lateral asymmetry, the X and the Y heterochromatin exhibit complex patterns of contralateral asymmetry. These observations, coupled with the data on the molecular content of D. hydei heterochromatin, give some insight into the chromosomal organization of highly and moderately repetitive heterochromatic DNA.  相似文献   

6.
Kathleen Church 《Chromosoma》1979,71(3):359-370
The X chromosome can be identified with the light microscope throughout all stages of the gonial cell cycle (including interphase) in the grasshopper Brachystola magna. At gonial mitotic stages the X chromosome gives the appearance of being undercondensed or negatively heteropycnotic. At interphase the X projects out from the body of the nucleus. — Examination with the electron microscope reveals that the X is compartmentalized at least two gonial cell cycles prior to the entry of the cells into meiotic prophase. The membrane layers that envelope the X chromatin at interphase remain associated with the X chromosome throughout gonial mitotic stages providing the ultrastructural basis for the apparent negative heteropycnosis observed with the light microscope. — The X chromosome is inactive in RNA synthesis during gonial mitotic stages but is hyperactive in RNA synthesis when compared to autosomes at gonial interphase. — X chromosome condensation which reaches its maximum at premieotic interphase is initiated at or prior to the pre-pentultimate gonial division.  相似文献   

7.
Daniel G. Bedo 《Chromosoma》1974,48(2):181-190
Salivary gland chromosomes from four populations of Anatopynia dyari were examined together with mitotio and meiotic chromosomes from one of the sites. Both mitotic and meiotic cells possess large blocks of heterochromatin, some of which fluoresce brightly after quinacrine staining. Mitotic figures show twelve chromosomes consisting of a graded size series with 5 meta- and submetacentric pairs and one small telocentric pair. — Salivary gland chromosomes have a loose chromocentre and three distinct size classes of chromosomes. The size classes include 1 long metacentric, 4 medium acrocentrics and 1 very small telocentric which is also twice the thickness of the rest of the complement. Quinacrine staining produces bright fluorescence of the centromeric third of chromosome VI, some ectopically paired regions of the chromocentre, basal bands and the telomeres of some chromosomes. — The discrepancy between arm ratios and relative lengths of mitotic and polytene chromosomes is explained by under-replication of nonfluorescing heterochromatin in the latter case. Brightly fluorescing heterochromatin behaves in an anomalous manner suggesting that it is either over, or else not severely under-replicated in salivary glands. The extra thickness of chromosome VI also suggests that it undergoes an extra round of replication. — A common complex rearrangement was found in the long arm of chromosome III in three of the populations. In the one population tested it was in Hardy Weinberg equilibrium.  相似文献   

8.
Hoechst 33258 fluorescent staining of Drosophila chromosomes   总被引:8,自引:2,他引:6  
Metaphase chromosomes of D. melanogaster, D. virilis and D. eopydei were sequentilly stained with quinacrine, 33258 Hoechst and Giemsa and photographed after each step. Hoechst stained chromosomes fluoresced much brighter and with different banding patterns than quinacrine stained ones. In contrast to mammalian chromosomes, Drosophia's quinacrine and Hoechst bright bands are all in centric heterochromatin and the banding patterns seem more taxonomically divergent than external morphological characteristics. Hoechst stained D. melanogaster chromosomes show unprecedented longitudinal differentiation by the heterochromatic regions; each arm of each autosome can be unambiguously identified and the Y shows eleven bright bands. The Hoechst stained Y can also be identified in polytene chromocenters. Centric alpha heterochromatin of each D. virilis autosome is composed of two blocks which can be differtiated by a combination of quinacrine and Hoechst staining. The distal block is always Q-H- while the proximal block is, for the various autosomes, either Q-H-, Q+H- or Q+H+. With these permutations of Hoechst and quinacrine staining, D. virilis autosomes can be unambiguously distinguished. The X and two autosomes have H+ heterochromatin which can easily be seen in polytene and interphase nuclei where it seems to aggregate and exclude H- heterochromatin. This affinity of fluorochrome similar heterochromatin was been seen in colcemide induced multiple somatic non-disjunctions where H+ chromosomes were distributed to one rosette and H- chromosomes were distributed to another. Knowing the base composition and base sequences of Drosophila satellites, we conclude that AT richness may be necessary but is certainly an insufficient requirement for quinacrine bright chromatin while GC richness may be a sufficient requirement for the absence of quinacrine or Hoechst brightness. Condensed euchromatin is almost as bright as Q+ heterochromatin. While chromatin condensation has little effect on Hoechst staining, it appears to be "the most important factor responsible for quinacrine brightness.' All existing data from D. virilis indicate that each fluorochrome distinct block of alpha heterochromatin may contain a single a single DNA molecule which is one heptanucleotide repeated two million times.  相似文献   

9.
Thymidine incorporated as a terminal pulse into chromosomes otherwise substituted with 5-bromodeoxyuridine can be detected by associated bright 33258 Hoechst fluorescence. The location of metaphase chromosome regions identified by this method as last to complete DNA synthesis is consistent with the results of autoradiographic analyses with tritiated thymidine. The very late-replicating regions correspond to a subset of those which appear as bands after chromosomes are stained by quinacrine or modified Giemsa techniques. The high resolution of the 33258 Hoechst fluorescence pattern within individual cells is especially useful for revealing variations in the order of terminal replication. Both homolog asynchrony and fluctuations in the distribution of bright 33258 Hoechst fluorescence within chromosomes from different cells are apparent and localized to individual bands. The results are consistent with the possibility that these bands constitute units of chromosome replication as well as structure.  相似文献   

10.
In L. pardalinum, narrow bands of quinacrine fluorescence are distributed throughout the chromosomes. These vary in intensity from dull to bright, and their constant pattern allows all chromosomes to be recognized. Bright bands occur at some centromeres, and near all three nucleolar constrictions. In L. longiflorum, similar Q-bands occur along chromosomes, but they are less distinctive and their pattern does not closely match that of L. pardalinum. Also, L. longiflorum does not have bright regions at or near primary and secondary constrictions. Most Q-bands do not coincide with dark Giemsa C-bands, except for the bright nucleolar and centromeric regions in L. pardalinum. All C-banded heterochromatin stains identically after SSC pretreatment, dark with Giemsa and bright with quinacrine.— The many Q-bands of varying intensity, wide distribution and constant pattern, unrelated to C-bands, may be analogous to mammalian Q-bands. Such universality is expected if Q-bands area fundamental component of chromosome architecture.  相似文献   

11.
Root tips were pulse-labelled with tritiated thymidine. Late-labelled regions were mapped by quantitative autoradiography of metaphase chromosomes collected 11 h after the pulse for longiflorum (mean G2=14 h), and 13 h for pardalinum (mean G2=18 h). Late label in both species was preferentially located in sub-distal regions of the longer chromosome arms. Minimal labelling occurred in centromeric areas. — Some brightly Q-banded regions were late labelled, and some dull areas were not. However, late patterns were considerably more localised than bright Q-bands, and late regions were closely similar between species whereas Q-band patterns are not. Therefore bright Q-bands are apparently not consistently late replicating in Lilium, as they are in mammals, and they may therefore represent a different category of chromosomal substructure. — Centromeric C-bands and those at most nucleolar organisers were not late labelled. Only the more distal intercalary C-bands replicated late, and they were not significantly later than the chromatin surrounding them.  相似文献   

12.
Chromosomal localization of complex and simple repeated human DNAs   总被引:32,自引:0,他引:32  
Complex repeating restriction multimers and a simple AT rich satellite isolated with Hoechst 33258 (<= 0.5% of the human genome) were localized by in situ hybridization to human chromosomes. The complex repeats were clustered at the centromeres, consonant with their integration in tandem arrays at these loci; these sequences were very prominent on chromosomes 7, 10 and 19, sites not previously identified with any specific human repeated sequence. The Hoechst simple satellite labelled predominantly the long arms of the Y chromosome. Although this simple satellite and the complex restriction multimers did not hybridize with each other, and did not contain detectable ribosomal sequences, both isolates additionally labelled the nucleolus organizing regions (NORs) of acrocentric chromosomes. —The possible relationship of complex and simple repeated DNAs, and their assignment to specific chromosomal domains, is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Many species of grasshopper have an XX/XO sex chromosome system, including Tropidacris cristata grandis (23, XX/XO). The X chromosome behaves differently from the autosomes, but little is known about its origin and molecular composition. To better understand the genomic composition and evolutionary processes involved in the origin of the sex chromosomes, we undertook an analysis of its meiotic behavior, heterochromatin distribution and microdissection in T. c. grandis. Analysis of meiotic cells revealed a difference in the behavior of the X chromosome compared to the autosomes, with different patterns of condensation and cellular arrangement. Heterochromatic terminal blocks were predominant. The chromosome painting revealed a bright block in the centromeric/pericentromeric region of the X chromosome and slight markings in the other regions. In the autosomes, the X chromosome probe hybridized in the centromeric/pericentromeric region, and hybridization signals on terminal regions corresponding to the heterochromatic regions were also observed. The results showed that the X chromosome contains a significant amount of repetitive DNA. Based on the hybridization pattern, it is possible that the autosomes and sex chromosomes of T. c. grandis have a similar composition of repetitive DNAs, which could mean that the X chromosome has an autosomal origin.  相似文献   

14.
Cultured human peripheral blood lymphocytes were labelled with 3H-thymidine in the early or late S phase prior to mitosis. Quinacrine fluorescence patterns in metaphase chromosomes were then recorded photographically and the slides reprocessed for autoradiography so that the same metaphase cells were examined with the two techniques. The intensity and distribution of 3H-thymidine labelling was compared with the intensity and distribution of Q fluorescence with particular reference to chromosomes 1, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 and 22. It was found that chromosome regions showing bright fluorescence were also late replicating and that, in general, patterns of late replications reflected the patterns of fluorescence. Exceptions to this generalisation included the late labelling X chromosome in cells of female origin and areas near the centromeres on chromosomes 1, 9, 16 and 22. These centromeric regions show a dull fluorescence but, with exception of chromosome 9, are strongly Giemsa-positive in the ASG staining technique. On the basis of staining reaction, late replicating heterochromatic regions fall into five categories, the relationships and functional significance of these categories is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The facultative heterochromatic X chromosome in leptotene spermatocytes of the grasshopper Eyprepocnemis plorans showed marked hypoacetylation for lysine 9 in the H3 histone (H3-K9) with no sign of histone H2AX phosphorylation. Since H3-K9 hypoacetylation precedes the meiotic appearance of phosphorylated H2AX (gamma-H2AX), which marks the beginning of recombinational DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), it seems that meiotic sex-chromosome inactivation (MSCI) in this grasshopper occurs prior to the beginning of recombination and hence synapsis (which in this species begins later than recombination). In addition, all constitutively heterochromatic chromosome regions harbouring a 180-bp tandem-repeat DNA and rDNA (B chromosomes and pericentromeric regions of A chromosomes) were H3-K9 hypoacetylated at early leptotene even though they will synapse at subsequent stages. This also suggests that meiotic silencing in this grasshopper might be independent of synapsis. The H3-K9 hypoacetylated state of facultative and constitutive heterochromatin persisted during subsequent meiotic stages and was even apparent in round spermatids. Finally, the fact that B chromosomes are differentially hypoacetylated in testis and embryo interphase cells suggests that they might be silenced early in development and remain this way for most (or all) life-cycle stages.  相似文献   

16.
Mitotic chromosome structure is pivotal to cell division but difficult to observe in fine detail using conventional methods. DNA catenation has been implicated in both sister chromatid cohesion and chromosome condensation, but has never been observed directly. We have used a lab-on-a-chip microfluidic device and fluorescence microscopy, coupled with a simple image analysis pipeline, to digest chromosomal proteins and examine the structure of the remaining DNA, which maintains the canonical ‘X’ shape. By directly staining DNA, we observe that DNA catenation between sister chromatids (separated by fluid flow) is composed of distinct fibres of DNA concentrated at the centromeres. Disrupting the catenation of the chromosomes with Topoisomerase IIα significantly alters overall chromosome shape, suggesting that DNA catenation must be simultaneously maintained for correct chromosome condensation, and destroyed to complete sister chromatid disjunction. In addition to demonstrating the value of microfluidics as a tool for examining chromosome structure, these results lend support to certain models of DNA catenation organization and regulation: in particular, we conclude from our observation of centromere-concentrated catenation that spindle forces could play a driving role in decatenation and that Topoisomerase IIα is differentially regulated at the centromeres, perhaps in conjunction with cohesin.  相似文献   

17.
The organization of DNA in the mitotic metaphase and polytene chromosomes of the fungus gnat, Sciara coprophila, has been studied using base-specific DNA ligands, including anti-nucleoside antibodies. The DNA of metaphase and polytene chromosomes reacts with AT-specific probes (quinacrine, DAPI, Hoechst 33258 and anti-adenosine) and to a somewhat lesser extent with GC-specific probes (mithramycin, chromomycin A3 and anticytidine). In virtually every band of the polytene chromosomes chromomycin A3 fluorescence is almost totally quenched by counterstaining with the AT-specific ligand methyl green. This indicates that GC base pairs in most bands are closely interspersed with AT base pairs. The only exceptions are band IV-8A3 and the nucleolus organizer on the X. In contrast, quinacrine and DAPI fluorescence in every band is only slightly quenched by counterstaining with the GC-specific ligand actinomycin D. Thus, each band contains a moderate proportion of AT-rich DNA sequences with few interspersed GC base pairs. — The C-bands in mitotic and polytene chromosomes can be visualized by Giemsa staining after differential extraction of DNA and those in polytene chromosomes by the use of base-specific fluorochromes or antibodies without prior extraction of DNA. C-bands are located in the centromeric region of every chromosome, and the telomeric region of some. The C-bands in the polytene chromosomes contain AT-rich DNA sequences without closely interspered GC base pairs and lack relatively GC-rich sequences. However, one C-band in the centromeric region of chromosome IV contains relatively GC-rich sequences with closely interspersed AT base pairs. — C-bands make up less than 1% of polytene chromosomes compared to nearly 20% of mitotic metaphase chromosomes. The C-bands in polytene chromosomes are detectable with AT-specific or GC-specific probes while those in metaphase chromosomes are not. Thus, during polytenization there is selective replication of highly AT-rich and relatively GC-rich sequences and underreplication of the remainder of the DNA sequences in the constitutive heterochromatin.  相似文献   

18.
Klaus Hägele 《Chromosoma》1979,71(2):217-225
The DNA of fixed mitotic and meiotic chromosomes and of spermatides of Schistocerca gregaria males was heat denaturated and then differentially reassociated in a Giemsa buffer or in acridine orange buffer solution. After this procedure, two to three large, selectively stained regions are seen in the X chromosome of spermatocytes and spermatides. Denaturation and reassociation experiments have shown that after differential reassociation such a selective stainability of chromosome regions is characteristic for the presence of fast-reassociating, i.e., repetitive DNA (Stockert and Lisanti, 1972). The possible presence of repetitive DNA in the X chromosome regions concerned can not be the only reason for the occurrence of the heavily stained segments after reassociation because (1) these segments are obtained in positively heteropycnotic X chromosomes, but not in negatively heteropycnotic Xs and (2) they do not occur in positively heteropycnotic X chromosomes when the histones have been extracted before the denaturation and reassociation processes. Contrary to the latter statement, the heavily stained X chromosomal regions are preserved when the histones are removed after the denaturation and reassociation steps. — It is assumed that the heavily stained X chromosome segments represent DNA reassociation complexes which are only formed if histones are present. It is discussed whether the formation of the X chromosome complexes depends on a specific chromatin configuration within positively heteropycnotic X chromosomes.  相似文献   

19.
Canio G. Vosa 《Chromosoma》1970,31(4):446-451
Mitotic and salivary gland chromosomes of D. melanogaster show striking fluorescent patterns when stained with Quinacrine. In the salivary gland chromosomes there are up to five strongly fluorescing bands located on the fourth chromosome and at the proximal end of the X chromosome.—In mitotic cells the Y chromosome shows four fluorescent segments and other fluorescent regions are found proximally on the third pair and on the X chromosome. It is, therefore, possible to distinguish male and female interphase cells by their patterns of fluorescence.—A comparison between the position of heterochromatic, late replicating and fluorescing segments in the mitotic chromosomes, shows differences which demonstrate, for the first time, the chemical, morphological and genetical diversity of these three types of segments.  相似文献   

20.
Replication patterns of the X chromosomes and autosomes in D. melanogaster male and female larvae during the discontinuously labeled initial and end phases of DNA synthesis were compared. In female larvae X and autosomes behaved correspondingly during all the replication stages. In males, however, the X chromosome shows a differential replication behavior from that of the autosomes already during the discontinuously labeled initial stage.—In those nuclei of both sexes, in which the autosomes correspond in their initial replication patterns, significantly more labeled regions are to be found over the male X than over the female X. The complementary behavior during the end phases (Berendes, 1966), i.e. the reverse of that above, leads to an earlier completion of the replication cycle in most of the labeled regions of the male X chromosome. The differential replication revealed in the autoradiograms is interpreted as a consequence of the polytene structure in giant chromosomes.  相似文献   

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