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1.
The existence of fertile A. azarae females with a chromosome sex pair indistinguishable from that of males was reported more than 35 years ago. These heterogametic females were initially thought to occur due to an extreme process of dosage compensation in which X inactivation was restricted to Xp and complemented by a deletion of Xq (Xx females). Later on, a C-banding analysis of A. mollis variant females showed that these specimens were in fact XY* sex reversed and not Xx females. The finding of positive testing for Zfy and Sry multiple-copy genes in Akodon males and heterogametic females confirmed the XY* assumption. At the present time, XY* sex reversed females have been found to exist in nine Akodon species. Akodon heterogametic females produce X and Y* oocytes, which upon sperm fertilization give rise to viable XX (female), XY* (female), and XY (male) embryos, and to non-viable Y*Y zygotes. Heterozygous females exhibit a better reproductive performance than XX females in order to compensate the Y*Y zygote wastage. XY* sex reversed females are assumed to occur due to a deficient Sry expression resulting in the development of ovaries instead of testes. Moreover, the appearance of Y* elements is a highly recurrent event. It is proposed that homozygosity for an autosomal or pseudoautosomal recessive mutation (s-) inhibits Sry expression giving rise to XY* embryos with ovary development. Location of the Y* chromosome in the female germ cell lineage produces an ovary-specific imprinting of the Sry* gene maintaining its defective expression through generations independently from the presence or absence of s- homozygosity. By escaping the ovary-specific methylation some Y* chromosomes turn back to normal Ys producing Y oocytes capable of generating normal male embryos when fertilized by an X sperm. Fluctuations in the rate of variant females in field populations and in laboratory colonies of Akodon depend on the balance between the appearance of new variant females (s-/s-, XY* specimens) and the extinction of sex reversed specimens due to imprinting escape.  相似文献   

2.
A late replicating X or Y chromosome can be detected by 33258 Hoechst staining and fluorescence microscopy in a large proportion of female or male mouse embryo cells, respectively, which have been cultured in medium containing 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BUdR) for part of one DNA synthesis period, The observed distribution of late replicating chromosome regions also includes centromeric heterochromatin and some quinacrine positive bands.  相似文献   

3.
The status of X-chromosome replication was studied in twenty-seven 69,XXY and nine 69,XXX human triploids in which the parental origin of the additional haploid set was known from the study of chromosome heteromorphisms. Among the 69,XXY triploids, fourteen had no late replicating X, two had one late replicating X in all cells examined, and eleven had two populations of cells, one with late replicating X chromosome, and one without any. Among the 69,XXX triploids, four had a single late replicating X, and five had two populations of cells, one with one late replicating X, and one with two late replicating X chromosomes. There was no correlation between the parental origin of the triploidy and the type of X-chromosome inactivation. However the number of late replicating X chromosomes was significantly lower in cultures grown from fetal tissue when compared with those grown from extra-embryonic tissue. In cultures derived from extra-embryonic tissue there was a significant correlation between the gestational age of the sample and the proportion of late replicating X chromosomes. The older the specimen, the greater the number of late replicating X chromosomes.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Human female blood cultures were labeled with BrdU for detecting sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) by the Hoechst 33258 fluorescence technique. Late labeling with 3H-thymidine and autoradiography allowed the identification of the late replicating X. The mean number of SCEs in the cells was 13. The isopycnotic X showed an exchange frequency according to its relative length in the karyotype; in the late replicating X a doubled number of SCE events was observed.  相似文献   

5.
The genetically inactive, late-replicating human female X chromosome can be effectively distinguished from its more active, earlier-replicating homologue, when cells are grown according to the appropriate BrdU-33258 Hoechst protocol. Results obtained from a fluorescence analysis of DNA replication in X chromosomes are consistent with those from previous autoradiographic studies, but reflect additional sensitivity and resolution offered by the BrdU-Hoechst methodology. Both qualitative and quantitative differences in 33258 Hoechst fluorescence intensity, reflecting alterations in replication kinetics, can be detected between the two X chromosomes in female cells. The pattern of replication in the single X chromosome in male cells is indistinguishable from that of the early female X. Intercellular fluctuations in the distribution of regions replicating early or late in S phase, particularly with reference to the late female X, can be localized to structural bands, suggesting multifocal control of DNA synthesis in X chromosomes.  相似文献   

6.
Both mouse and man have the common XX/XY sex chromosome mechanism. The X chromosome is of original size (5-6% of female haploid set) and the Y is one of the smallest chromosomes of the complement. But there are species, belonging to a variety of orders, with composite sex chromosomes and multiple sex chromosome systems: XX/XY1Y2 and X1X1X2X2/X1X2Y. The original X or the Y, respectively, have been translocated on to an autosome. The sex chromosomes of these species segregate regularly at meiosis; two kinds of sperm and one kind of egg are produced and the sex ratio is the normal 1:1. Individuals with deviating sex chromosome constitutions (XXY, XYY, XO or XXX) have been found in at least 16 mammalian species other than man. The phenotypic manifestations of these deviating constitutions are briefly discussed. In the dog, pig, goat and mouse exceptional XX males and in the horse XY females attract attention. Certain rodents have complicated mechanisms for sex determination: Ellobius lutescens and Tokudaia osimensis have XO males and females. Both sexes of Microtus oregoni are gonosomic mosaics (male OY/XY, female XX/XO). The wood lemming, Myopus schisticolor, the collared lemming, Dirostonyx torquatus, and perhaps also one or two species of the genus Akodon have XX and XY females and XY males. The XX, X*X and X*Y females of Myopus and Dicrostonyx are discussed in some detail. The wood lemming has proved to be a favourable natural model for studies in sex determination, because a large variety of sex chromosome aneuploids are born relatively frequently. The dosage model for sex determination is not supported by the wood lemming data. For male development, genes on both the X and the Y chromosomes are necessary.  相似文献   

7.
Summary a 73/4-year-old girl with short stature was found to have a recombinant (X), dup q chromosome resulting from an apparently unique pericentric inversion (X)(p11.2q26) present in her mother and maternal grandmother. The recombinant X chromosome was shown to be late replicating and the inversion X chromosome to be randomly inactivated. This appears to be only the eighth report (7 female, 1 male) of a recombinant resulting from an X pericentric inversion despite all diagnosed females having mild clinical abnormalities. Reasons for the rarity of such recombinant X chromosomes in man are examined.  相似文献   

8.
I Yoshida  N Kashio    N Takagi 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(11):4397-4405
It is unknown how and why the genetically inactivated mammalian X chromosome replicates late in S phase. There are also occasional inactive X chromosomes characterized by an opposite behavior replicating early in S phase. Two clonal cell lines, MTLB3 and MTLH8, isolated from a cultured murine T-cell lymphoma have an allocyclic X chromosome of the latter type. This precociously replicating X chromosome was judged to be genetically inactive as the late replicating one. Immediately after fusion with another cell line, the precociously replicating X chromosome from these cells starts to replicate late in S phase. This finding seems to suggest that late replication characterizing the inactive X chromosome is actively maintained by a trans-acting factor in female somatic cells, and that its lack entails a switch from late replication to precocious replication. It remains unknown whether this presumptive factor also modifies the autosomal replication pattern.  相似文献   

9.
The addition of thymidine (TdR) to cells growing in a medium containing 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BUdR) at the end of the first replication cycle results in the incorporation of TdR into the late replicating DNA regions. These sites can be visualized by staining the metaphase chromosomes with the fluorescent dye "33258 Hoechst" or a "33258 Hoechst" Giemsa procedure. A sequence of late replication patterns has been established in metaphase chromosomes of cultured human peripheral lymphocytes. The patterns are in agreement with those obtained by the standard autoradiographic procedures, but are more accurate. As is known from autoradiography, late replicating bands are in the position of G or Q bands. The "33258 Hoechst" Giemsa staining procedure of chromosomes which have replicated in the presence of BUdR first and in TdR for the last 2 hrs of the S phase is preferable to the currently used Giemsa banding techniques: the method yields very well banded metaphases in all preparations examined, as the chromosome structure is not disrupted by the pretreatment. The bands are very distinct, even in the "difficult" chromosomes (e.g. No. 4, 5, 8 and X). In female cells the late replicating X chromosome can be identified by its size and staining pattern. In addition to the replication asynchrony, the sequence of replication within both X chromosomes in female cells is not absolutely identical. The phenomenon of a phase difference in replication between the homologues is not a peculiarity of the X chromosome, but can be found in all autosomes as well as in homologous positions on the chromatids of individual chromosomes.  相似文献   

10.
The chromosomes were studied throughout meiotic prophase by electron microscopy of surface-spread oocytes from one XX, four X*X, and three X*Y female wood lemmings, Myopus schisticolor. The X* chromosome had originated from X by a deletion and an inversion in the short arm. The deletion was confirmed in pachytene cells from X*X females; a D-loop was present in the sex bivalent in 16.8% of the cells, and asynapsis of unequal ends was seen in 9.1% of other cells. At late pachytene the D-loop underwent synaptic adjustment. The breakpoints of the deletion are in G-light bands. No inversion loop was seen, which also is in agreement with Ashley's ('88) hypothesis; at least one of the presumed breakpoints of the inversion is in G-dark chromatin. Various types of synaptic abnormalities, such as nonhomologous pairing (triple pairing, interchange, self-synapsis), univalents, foldbacks, and broken lateral elements, were encountered in all types of female. X*Y females showed a high frequency of abnormal oocytes (70.7%), which significantly exceeded that of X*X (23.1%) and XX (8.1%). Univalents were particularly common in the X*Y females. J. Exp. Zool. 290:504-516, 2001.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The mechanism of sex determination in mammals appears highly conserved: the presence of a Y chromosome triggers the male developmental pathway, whereas the absence of a Y chromosome results in a default female phenotype. However, if the Y chromosome fails to initiate the male pathway (referred to as Y*), XY* females can result, as is the case in several species of South American field mice (genus Akodon). The breeding genetics in this system inherently select against the Y* chromosome such that the frequency of XY* females should decrease rapidly to very low frequencies. However, in natural populations of Akodon, XY* females persist at substantial frequencies; for example, 10% of females are XY* in A. azarae and 30% in A. boliviensis. We develop a mathematical model that considers the potential roles of three evolutionary forces in maintaining XY* females: Y-to-Y* chromosome transitions (mutation), chromosome segregation distortion (meiotic drive), and differential fecundity (selection). We then test the predictions of our model using data from breeding colonies of A. azarae. We conclude that any single force is inadequate to maintain XY* females. However, a combination of segregation bias of the male and female Y chromosomes during spermatogenesis/oogenesis and increased fecundity in XY* females could account for the observed frequencies of XY* females.  相似文献   

13.
In all fertile females the fragile X chromosome was almost always late replicating (inactive) in an average 82% of cells whereas in infertile females, it was early replicating (active) in about the same percentage of cells. These observations strongly suggest a correlation between the replication (activity) status of the fragile X chromosome and reproductive performance.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Blastocysts and late gestation stages of the marsupial mouse, Antechinus stuartii, were examined cytologically and electrophoretically to investigate X chromosome activity during embryogenesis. A late replicating X chromosome was identified in the protoderm cells of female unilaminar blastocysts and in the cells of embryonic and extra-embryonic regions of older blastocysts. Sex chromatin bodies were also observed in female bilaminar and trilaminar blastocysts. The X linked enzyme -galactosidase showed no evidence of paternal allele expression in the extra-embryonic region of bilaminar blastocysts or in the yolk sac and embryonic tissue of known heterozygotes. It is concluded that the late replicating X chromosome is paternal in origin and that unlike the laboratory mouse, X inactivation is not correlated with cell differentiation in Antechinus.  相似文献   

16.
Sexual dimorphism in body weight, fat distribution, and metabolic disease has been attributed largely to differential effects of male and female gonadal hormones. Here, we report that the number of X chromosomes within cells also contributes to these sex differences. We employed a unique mouse model, known as the "four core genotypes," to distinguish between effects of gonadal sex (testes or ovaries) and sex chromosomes (XX or XY). With this model, we produced gonadal male and female mice carrying XX or XY sex chromosome complements. Mice were gonadectomized to remove the acute effects of gonadal hormones and to uncover effects of sex chromosome complement on obesity. Mice with XX sex chromosomes (relative to XY), regardless of their type of gonad, had up to 2-fold increased adiposity and greater food intake during daylight hours, when mice are normally inactive. Mice with two X chromosomes also had accelerated weight gain on a high fat diet and developed fatty liver and elevated lipid and insulin levels. Further genetic studies with mice carrying XO and XXY chromosome complements revealed that the differences between XX and XY mice are attributable to dosage of the X chromosome, rather than effects of the Y chromosome. A subset of genes that escape X chromosome inactivation exhibited higher expression levels in adipose tissue and liver of XX compared to XY mice, and may contribute to the sex differences in obesity. Overall, our study is the first to identify sex chromosome complement, a factor distinguishing all male and female cells, as a cause of sex differences in obesity and metabolism.  相似文献   

17.
小麂、黑麂、赤麂精母细胞联会复合体的比较研究   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:6  
本工作以界面铺张——硝酸银染色技术,对小麂(Muntiacus reeuesi)、黑麂(M.crinifrons)和赤麂(M.muntjak)的精母细胞联会复合体(Syna ptonemal complex,SC)进行亚显微结构的比较研究。结果表明: 1.SC的平均相对长度和臂比指数同有丝分裂细胞相应染色体的数值有很好的一致性。根据SC的相对长度和臂比指数绘制了三种麂的SC组型图。雄性黑麂减数分裂前期形成一个复杂的易位多价体,意味着其核型的演化过程涉及两次染色体易位和一次臂间倒位。 2.在减数分裂前期,性染色体的形态和行为同常染色体的有明显差异,如性染色体嗜银性较强,配对延迟等。XY的配对起始于早粗线期,在中粗线期,Y的全长均同X配对;XY-SC开始解体于晚粗线期。 3.在粗线期,X染色体未配对区域出现自身折叠,形成“发夹”状结构。这种“发夹”结构的形成,可能是在性染色体的进化过程中,X染色体通过不对称易位得到的重复片段在减数分裂前期同源配对的一种细胞学表现。  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Patterns of early and late replication in the individual chromosomes of the Djungarian hamster (Phodopus sungorus) have been studied using the techniques of Giemsa staining suppression when bromodeoxyuridine is incorporated into the DNA. — Late replicating autosome regions correspond to G-band regions, early replication regions are less clearly demarcated but correspond to R-band regions plus some G-band zones. In part this reduction in sharpness of early replication bands may be due to the fact that nearly all metaphase G-bands contain R-band material since they are compounded from blocks of sub-G bands. — The long arm of the X chromosomes in the female differ in the start time of synthesis but are rarely separable at the close of S. There are no differences between the short arms. In the male, Y starts very late but finishes about the same time as the X which behaves like the early replicating X of the female.Visiting worker from Department of Biological Sciences, Sambulpur University, Burla 768017, India  相似文献   

20.
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