首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 906 毫秒
1.
In situ hybridisation experiments were carried out to reappraise the state of condensation of the Y chromosome in germ cells and Sertoli cells of the mouse. Previous work had suggested that all testicular cells showed a condensed Y chromosome prior to the adult stage. We now demonstrate that, although the Y chromosome is condensed in pre-pubertal Sertoli cells, it is greatly expanded in primordial germ cells (gonocytes). An expanded Y-signal is first seen in Sertoli cell nuclei at or around day 21 of postnatal development, coinciding with the first appearance of spermatids in the germinal epithelium.  相似文献   

2.
The condensation behaviour of the human Y chromosome in germ cells and Sertoli cells of pre- and post-pubertal testes was followed by fluorescence in situ hybridisation using probes for three different regions of the Y chromosome. Patterns of expansion or contraction of signal are taken to reflect degrees of condensation of the related Y chromatin and hence its potential for genetic activity. For probe pHY2.1, which labels the distal non-fluorescent and fluorescent heterochromatin of the Y chromosome (Yq12), an expanded signal seen in gonocytes of the prepubertal testis is superseded by a condensed signal seen in adult germ cells at all but the zygotene stage of meiotic prophase when meiotic pairing takes place. In contrast, Sertoli cells show a condensed signal pre-pubertally but a greatly expanded signal in the adult testis. A totally condensed pHY2.1 signal is found in a chromosomally normal man with Sertoli-cell-only syndrome. It is hypothesised that control over at least some facets of spermatogenesis may not, in the adult, be autonomous to the germ cells, but rather may emanate from the Sertoli cells. Chromatin expansion at zygotene could, however, be important for pairing and crossing over in the XY bivalent, successful synapsis ensuring survival of spermatocytes into the post-meiotic stages.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Conventional and molecular cytogenetic analyses of three murine cancer cell lines that had been induced in male athymic mice by the injection of three different human prostate cancer cell lines revealed selective amplification of the Y chromosome. In particular, analysis of metaphase and interphase nuclei by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with the mouse Y chromosome-specific DNA painting probe revealed the presence of various numbers of Y chromosomes, ranging from one to eight, with a large majority of nuclei showing two copies (46.5–60.1%). In Interphase nuclei, the Y chromosomes showed distinct morphology, allowing identification irrespective of whether the preparations were treated for 15 min or for 5 h with Colcemid, a chemical known to cause chromosome condensation. However, FISH performed on human lymphocyte cultures with chromosome-specific DNA painting probes other than the Y chromosome did not reveal condensed chromosome morphology in interphase nuclei even after 12 h of Colcemid treatment. Our FISH results indicate that (1) the Y chromosome is selectively amplified in all three cell lines; (2) the mouse Y chromosome number is comparable in both interphase and metaphase cells; (3) the Y chromosome number varies between one and eight, with a large majority of cells showing two or three copies in most interphase nuclei; (4) the condensation of the Y chromosome is not affected by the duration of Colcemid treatment but by its inherent DNA constitution; and (5) the number of copies of the Y chromosome is increased and retained not only in human prostate tumor cell lines but also in murine tumors induced by these prostate tumor cell lines.  相似文献   

4.
Fluorescent in situ hybridization allows for rapid and precise detection of specific nucleic acid sequences in interphase and metaphase cells. We applied fluorescent in situ hybridization to human lymphocyte interphase nuclei in suspension to determine differences in amounts of chromosome specific target sequences amongst individuals by dual beam flow cytometry. Biotinylated chromosome 1 and Y specific repetitive satellite DNA probes were used to measure chromosome 1 and Y polymorphism amongst eight healthy volunteers. The Y probe fluorescence was found to vary considerably in male volunteers (mean fluorescence 169, S.D. 35.6). It was also detectable in female volunteers (mean fluorescence 81, S.D. 10.7), because 5-10% of this repetitive sequence is located on autosomes. The Y probe fluorescence in males was correlated with the position of the Y chromosome cluster in bivariate flow karyotypes. When chromosome 1 polymorphism was studied, one person out of the group of eight appeared to be highly polymorphic, with a probe fluorescence 26% below the average. By means of fluorescent in situ hybridization on a glass slide and bivariate flow karyotyping, this 26% difference was found to be caused by a reduction of the centromere associated satellite DNA on one of the homologues of chromosome 1. The simultaneous hybridization to human lymphocyte interphase nuclei of biotinylated chromosome 1 specific repetitive DNA plus AAF-modified chromosome Y specific DNA was detected by triple beam flow cytometry. The bicolor double hybridized nuclei could be easily distinguished from the controls. When the sensitivity of this bicolor hybridization is improved, this approach could be useful for automatic detection of numerical chromosome aberrations, using one of the two probes as an internal control.  相似文献   

5.
In order to reveal the time-course of decondensation of the Y chromosome in Sertoli cells, testes preparations of fetal, subadult and adult laboratory mice in different developmental stages were hybridized in situ with biotinylated probe pY353/B, which binds along the entire long arm of the mouse Y chromosome. All fetal and subadult testicular cells exhibited tightly compacted hybridization signals, indicating highly condensed Y chromosomes. Diffuse signals, indicating decondensation of the Y chromosome were found for the first time in the structurally differentiated Sertoli cells of 35 to 40 day old animals. Since this coincides with the appearance of mature sperm nuclei, a correlation between decondensation of the Y chromosome and its activity in sperm maturation and/or sperm motility can be presumed.  相似文献   

6.
The distribution of XX and XY cells in XX----XY chimaeric mouse testes was analysed by enzyme marker analysis of separated testicular tissues and by in situ DNA marker analysis of air-dried testicular cells and testis sections. XX cells contributed to the Leydig cells, the peritubular cells and the vascularized connective tissue of the tunica albuginea. The Sertoli cells, on the other hand, appeared to be exclusively XY. These results indicate that during the development of the testis, Sertoli cell differentiation is triggered by cell-autonomous activity of the Y chromosomal testis-determining gene Tdy. Subsequent steps in testis differentiation may be a consequence of Sertoli cell activity.  相似文献   

7.
Coexistence of inverted Y, chromosome 15p+ and abnormal phenotype.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In this study, we report conventional and molecular cytogenetic studies in a patient with multiple anomalies who is a carrier of a pericentric inversion on chromosome Y and a chromosome 15p+. His parents were phenotypically normal. The father is a carrier of a pericentric inversion of chromosome Y, and the mother carries a large chromosome 15p+ variant. The inverted Y chromosome was demonstrated by GTG- and CBG-banding, and DAPI-staining. The presence of extra chromosomal material on the chromosome 15p, that was C-band and DAPI positive, was demonstrated by trypsin G-banding. This suggests that the extra chromosomal material contained repetitive DNA sequences. NOR-staining indicated the presence a nuclear organizer region at the junction of the chromosome 15p+ material. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), with chromosome X and Y painting probes, alpha- and classic-satellite probes specific for chromosome Y, alpha- and beta-satellite III probes for chromosome 15 were used to elucidate the nature of both the inverted Y chromosome and chromosome 15p+. The result with chromosome X and Y painting probes, alpha-satellite, classic-satellite, and DYS59 probes specific for chromosome Y revealed the rearrangement of the Y chromosome was an inv(Y)(p11.2q11.22 or q11.23). FISH with alpha-satellite and beta-satellite III probes for chromosome 15 demonstrated that the extra chromosomal material on the chromosome 15 probably represents beta-satellite III sequences. The possible roles of the simultaneous occurrence of an inverted Y and the amplified DNA sequence on chromosome 15p in the abnormal phenotype of the proband are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Analysis of the viability, differentiation, clonogenicity and function of human stem/progenitor cells requires suitable xenograft models. However, the identification of transplanted cells has been generally difficult. Fluorescence in situ hybridization is a tedious method for analyzing tissues, and localization of transplanted cells with X or Y chromosome probes is limited by the sparse signals produced. Therefore, we examined the possibility of generating either pan-nuclear signals with a total human DNA probe or multiple nuclear signals with a pan-centromeric human DNA probe. The probes were labeled with digoxigenin to make reaction products visible by light microscopy and to allow the use of immunohistochemistry methods incorporating various color schemes to demonstrate specific properties of transplanted cells. The ability to localize all types of nucleated human cells with such probes will facilitate studies of stem cell biology and cell and gene therapy, as well as the development of new animal models.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Thirty-nine recombinants isolated from a Y chromosome-specific library were deletion mapped. Seven deletion intervals were defined by hybridization of probes to DNA of eight individuals with aberrant Y chromosomes. Extreme cytogenetic limits of the deletion intervals were determined by in situ hybridization of one probe per deletion interval. Five intervals, with a total of twenty-five probes, were allocated to the longarm euchromatic region. The probes described will be useful for characterization of aberrant Y chromosomes, in searching for expressed sequences on the Y chromosome, and for further study of the evolutionary relationship between the Y chromosome and other chromosomes.  相似文献   

10.
Fluorescence in situ hybridization was used to determine the spatial distribution of chromatin in zygote pronuclei. A hybrid system involving golden hamster eggs and individual human sperm permitted use of DNA probes specific for the entire human chromosome 4, for the heterochromatic region on the long arm of the human Y chromosome and for unique DNA sequences on human chromosome 19. Chromosome 4 occupied a circumscribed domain in the pronuclei, similar to findings in somatic interphases. Unlike the situation in somatic interphases, the Y heterochromatin was extended throughout the first cell cycle. Pronuclear chromatin was extended 3- to 4-fold compared to somatic interphase chromatin. The extended pronuclear chromatin conformation is likely to affect a zygote's susceptibility to environmental hazards.  相似文献   

11.
Aneuploidy tests by means of in situ hybridization with chromosome-specific DNA probes on interphase nuclei have been carried out on human lymphocytes treated with diethylstilbestrol (DES). A DNA probe specific for chromosome Y (Y97), either radioactive or biotinylated, was used for the assays. Autoradiography or FITC-conjugated antibiotin antibodies were employed to visualize the hybridization sites. A significant increase of hyperdiploid nuclei was obtained with both procedures and a dose-related effect was revealed using the biotinylated probe. The results obtained, while giving further support to the evidence that DES is able to induce aneuploidy in cultured human cells, also indicate that the sensitivity of the assay can be improved by using biotinylated probes coupled with fluorescent antibodies.  相似文献   

12.
Flow cytometric sperm sorting based on X and Y sperm DNA difference has been established as the only effective method for sexing the spermatozoa of mammals. The standard method for verifying the purity of sorted X and Y spermatozoa has been to reanalyze sorted sperm aliquots. We verified the purity of flow-sorted porcine X and Y spermatozoa and accuracy of DNA reanalysis by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using chromosome Y and 1 DNA probe. Eight ejaculates from 4 boars were sorted according to the Beltsville Sperm Sexing method. Porcine chromosome Y- and chromosome 1-specific DNA probes were used on sorted sperm populations in combination with FISH. Aliquots of the sorted sperm samples were reanalyzed for DNA content by flow cytometry. The purity of the sorted X-bearing spermatozoa was 87.4% for FISH and 87.0% for flow cytometric reanalysis; purity for the sorted Y-bearing spermatozoa was 85.9% for FISH and 84.8% for flow cytometric reanalysis. A total of 4,424 X sperm cells and 4,256 Y sperm cells was examined by FISH across the 8 ejaculates. For flow cytometry, 5,000 sorted X spermatozoa and 5,000 Y spermatozoa were reanalyzed for DNA content for each ejaculate. These results confirm the high purity of flow sorted porcine X and Y sperm cells and the validity of reanalysis of DNA in determining the proportions of X- and Y-sorted spermatozoa from viewing thousands of individual sperm chromosomes directly using FISH.  相似文献   

13.
Fluorescent DNA probes are used to characterise the chromosome constitution of preimplantation embryos. FISH is used to select normal or balanced embryos in carriers of balanced chromosomal rearrangements, for embryo sexing or for aneuploidy screening in women of advanced age, who have had recurrent abortions or IVF failures. In most cases, FISH is performed on interphase blastomeres which are asynchronously dividing cells, that can be in G1, S or G2. However, a correct interpretation of a double FISH signal, which may correspond to a split signal, to a replicated chromosome region or to the presence of an extra chromosome is essential to establish an accurate diagnosis. To determine if the cell stage could influence the interpretation of FISH results, we compared the signal characteristics of one locus-specific probe, two different subtelomere region probes, and a centromere region probe in non-dividing Sertoli cells and in proliferating lymphocytes. Most cells had two signals per chromosome pair (i.e., a situation corresponding to G0 in Sertoli cells and to G1 or to a prereplication stage in lymphocytes). Nevertheless, in proliferating cells the percentage of nuclei with a number of signals different from the expected (two unreplicated chromosomes per pair) was different from that found in non-dividing cells (P < 0.05). It was estimated that 10.8% of double dots in dividing cells resulted from DNA replication. The sequence of replication was first the locus-specific region, second a telomere region, and third the centromere. In conclusion, the DNA replication process could result in errors of interpretation (misdiagnosis) in 7% of proliferating cells. Thus, the use of a cell cycle phase-specific marker could avoid errors by indicating the cell stage in which the nucleus analysed is found.  相似文献   

14.
Sex-chromosome mosaicism was quantitatively analyzed in two patients using DNA probes specific for human X and Y chromosomes. Both patients were female with stigmata of the Turner syndrome, and both had a 45,X cell line and a 46,XY cell line. One of the patients had a morphologically abnormal, nonfluorescent Y chromosome, dic(Y)(q11). Hybridization of DNA from this patient with two repetitive DNA sequences specific for the heterochromatic region of the Y chromosome indicated that most of the Y-heterochromatic sequences were deleted. DNA from both patients was hybridized with a probe for the DXYS1 locus and found to have the X- and Y-linked loci. Densitometric measurements of the relative intensities of the X- and Y-linked bands were used to calculate the degree of mosaicism in each case. The percentages of 45,X cells obtained by DNA analysis agreed with those obtained by chromosome analysis. DNA analysis provides a way to quantitate mosaicism at the DNA level and in nondividing tissue.  相似文献   

15.
DNA probes are now widely used for prenatal diagnosis, but the prospect of preimplantation diagnosis of genetic disorders requires the development of sensitive genetic tests that can be performed on small numbers of cells removed from a preimplantation-stage pre-embryo. The sensitivity of molecular tests can now be increased by specifically amplifying the target DNA with the polymerase chain reaction. In situ hybridisation with chromosome-specific DNA probes to repeated sequences also permits the detection of particular numerical chromosome aberrations or the distinction of male and female pre-embryos when only a few interphase nuclei are available. We have used in situ hybridisation to a Y chromosome-specific DNA probe to sex preimplantation-stage pre-embryos and to sex fetuses from samples of chorionic villus cells, amniotic fluid cells, and fetal blood. These two approaches (amplification of target DNA and in situ hybridisation) provide suitable tests for improving prenatal diagnosis particularly when few cells are available and they offer the possibility of tests suitable for preimplantation diagnosis.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Chromosomal analysis in a child with ambiguous sex showed mosaicism of at least two cell lines with one or more marker chromosomes or none at all. They were shown to be derived from the Y chromosome by fluorescent in situ hybridisation (FISH) using different DNA probes that cover parts of the long and the short arm.  相似文献   

17.
The purpose of our study was the application of non-isotopic in situ hybridization with chromosome-specific repetitive DNA probes for the determination of cytogenetically aberrant cells in routine cytological materials, such as cervical smears and breast tumour aspirates. Hyperdiploid cells in fine needle aspirates (FNA) of breast tumours could be visualized by in situ hybridization with a chromosome l-specific repetitive DNA probe. However, for the evaluation of a specific cell type in heterogeneous cell populations, i.e. cervical smears, a procedure combining immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization can be required. Therefore, we developed a combination protocol using β-galactosidase/ ferri-ferrocyanide (blue-green) for immunocytochemistry and peroxidase/DAB (brown-black) for detection of the DNA probe. the described protocol enabled us to distinguish squamous epithelial cells within heterogeneous cell populations. By combining the chromosome 1 DNA probe with a specific cytokeratin marker it was possible to identify the chromosomal abnormal cells within cervical smears.  相似文献   

18.
19.
SUMO-1 is a member of a ubiquitin-related family of proteins that mediates important post-translational effects affecting diverse physiological functions. Whereas SUMO-1 is detected in the testis, little is known about its reproductive role in males. Herein, cell-specific SUMO-1 was localized in freshly isolated, purified male germ cells and somatic cells of mouse and rat testes using Western analysis, high-resolution single-cell bioimaging, and in situ confocal microscopy of seminiferous tubules. During germ cell development, SUMO-1 was observed at low but detectable levels in the cytoplasm of spermatogonia and early spermatocytes. SUMO-1 appeared on gonosomal chromatin during zygotene when chromosome homologues pair and sex chromatin condensation is initiated. Striking SUMO-1 increases in the sex body of early-to-mid-pachytene spermatocytes correlated with timing of additional sex chromosome condensation. Before the completion of the first meiotic division, SUMO-1 disappeared from the sex body when X and Y chromosomal activity resumed. Together, these data indicate that sumoylation may be involved in non-homologous chromosomal synapsis, meiotic sex chromosome inactivation, and XY body formation. During spermiogenesis, SUMO-1 localized in chromocenters of certain round spermatids and perinuclear ring and centrosomes of elongating spermatids, data implicating SUMO-1 in the process of microtubule nucleation and nuclear reshaping. STAT-4, one potential target of sumoylation, was located along the spermatid nuclei, adjacent but not co-localized with SUMO-1. Androgen receptor-positive Leydig, Sertoli, and some peritubular myoepithelial cells express SUMO-1, findings suggesting a role in modulating steroid action. Testicular SUMO-1 expression supports its specific functions in inactivation of sex chromosomes during meiosis, spermatid microtubule nucleation, nuclear reshaping, and gene expression.  相似文献   

20.
Male-associated DNA sequences were analyzed in Cannabis sativa L. (hemp), a dioecious plant with heteromorphic sex chromosomes. DNA was isolated from male and female plants and subjected to random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis. Of 120 primers, 17 yielded 400 to 1500-bp fragments detectable in male, but not female, plants. These fragments were cloned and used as probes in gel-blot analysis of genomic DNA. When male and female DNA was hybridized with 2 of these male-specific fragments, MADC(male-associated DNA sequences in C. sativa)3 and MADC4, particularly intense bands specific to male plants were detected in addition to bands common to both sexes. The MADC3 and MADC4 sequences were shown to encode gag/pol polyproteins of copia-like retrotransposons. Fluorescence in situ hybridization with MADC3 and MADC4 as probes revealed a number of intense signals on the Y chromosome as well as dispersed signals on all chromosomes. The gel-blot analysis and fluorescence in situ hybridization results presented here support the hypothesis that accumulation of retrotransposable elements on the Y chromosome might be 1 cause of heteromorphism of sex chromosomes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号