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1.
In a single male specimen of Myrmeleon mexicanum Banks the sex chromosomes, normally X and Y, were replaced by what appeared to be X1X2 and Y. These segregated as expected on that interpretation in only half of the spermatocytes — in the other half, one X and the Y segregated from the other X. This atypical segregation is explicable on the assumption that one of the supposed Xs is a supernumerary, not a sex chromosome, and the diploid complement of the male comprises six pairs of autosomes plus a supernumerary and the X and Y sex chromosomes. The orientation of the X chromosomes at first metaphase was variable: kinetochoric activity may be localized midway the length of the chromosome, as in gonial mitosis, or terminally. Comparative study of three congeneric species, seven of Brachynemurus, one of Psammoleon, and one of Vella showed normal segregation in all, and no evidence for secondary kinetochoric activity. In nine of the species studied one pair of autosomes was unconjoined at first metaphase in 0.3%–1.2% of primary spermatocytes. These autosomes segregated precociously with the sex chromosomes in the central unit of the spindle. In one exceptional male of Brachynemurus hubbardi Currie all first meiotic metaphases showed this behavior, and a compound X1X2/Y1Y2 system was thus simulated. Bivalent formation replaced distance segregation of sex chromosomes in 0.4%–3.2% of the spermatocytes in seven of the thirteen species studied. These sex-bivalents frequently displayed partial or complete failure in congression.  相似文献   

2.
During meiosis I, homologous chromosomes join together to form bivalents. Through trial and error, bivalents achieve stable bipolar orientations (attachments) on the spindle that eventually allow the segregation of homologous chromosomes to opposite poles. Bipolar orientations are stable through tension generated by poleward forces to opposite poles. Unipolar orientations lack tension and are stereotypically not stable. The behavior of sex chromosomes during meiosis I in the male black widow spider Latrodectus mactans (Araneae, Theridiidae) challenges the principles governing such a scenario. We found that male L. mactans has two distinct X chromosomes, X1 and X2. The X chromosomes join together to form a connection that is present in prometaphase I but is lost during metaphase I, before the autosomes disjoin at anaphase I. We found that both X chromosomes form stable unipolar orientations to the same pole that assure their co-segregation at anaphase I. Using micromanipulation, immunofluorescence microscopy, and electron microscopy, we studied this unusual chromosome behavior to explain how it may fit the current dogma of chromosome distribution during cell division.  相似文献   

3.
An ultrastructural study has been made of spermatogenesis in two species of primitive spiders having holocentric chromosomes (Dysdera crocata, XO and Segestria florentia X1X2O). Analysis of the meiotic prophase shows a scarcity or absence of typical leptotene to pachytene stages. Only in D. crocata have synaptonemal complex (SC) remnants been seen, and these occurred in nuclei with an extreme chromatin decondensation. In both species typical early prophase stages have been replaced by nuclei lacking SC and with their chromatin almost completely decondensed, constituting a long and well-defined diffuse stage. Only nucleoli and the condensed sex chromosomes can be identified. — In S. florentina paired non-homologous sex chromosomes lack a junction lamina and thus clearly differ from the sex chromosomes of more evolved spiders with an X1X2O male sex determination mechanism. In the same species, sex chromosomes can be recognized during metaphase I due to their special structural details, while in D. crocata the X chromosome is not distinguishable from the autosomes at this stage. — The diffuse stage and particularly the structural characteristics of the sex chromosomes during meiotic prophase are reviewed and discussed in relation to the meiotic process in other arachnid groups.  相似文献   

4.
A unique cytogenetic system in monotremes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
All 3 extant genera of monotremes show a unique kind of cytogenetic system involving the formation of a structurally heterozygous chain multiple apparently coupled with a system of complementary gametic elimination. In the echidna Tachyglossus there are 63 chromosomes in the male and 64 in the female. This is associated with an X1X2Y/X1X1X2X2 sex chromosome system. Additionally in both sexes there are 6 mitotic chromosomes (a-f) which have no obvious homologous partners. At male meiosis these are included with the 3 sex chromosomes in a chain multiple of nine which has the constitution X1·Y·X2·f·e·d·c·b·a. This shows convergent orientation at first metaphase leading to the production of two kinds of sperm, namely X1X2 eca and Yfdb. Since no individual of either sex has been found homozygous for any of the a-f elements it follows that only gametes carrying different combinations of the three unpaired elements give rise to viable offspring. Whether this depends on gametic selection or on zygotic lethality is not known. An apparently identical system operates in Zaglossus. In the platypus Ornithorhynchus, on the other hand, there are 52 chromosomes in both males and females associated with an XY/XX sex chromosome mechanism and the presence of 4 consistently unpaired elements (a-d) at mitosis. A chain multiple of 10 forms at male meiosis involving the 2 sex chromosomes, the 4 unpaired elements and two of the small pairs of autosomes. Additionally the six longest autosome pairs in Tachyglossus and the X1 show a polymorphism for size which in heterozygous combination leads to the formation of unequal bivalents at male meiosis.  相似文献   

5.
A cytogenetic study performed on a population of the South American leptodactylid frog Eleutherodactylus maussi revealed multiple sex chromosomes of the X1X1X2X2/X1X2Y (=XXAA/XXAY) type. The diploid chromosome number is 2n=36 in all females and 2n=35 in most males. The multiple sex chromosomes originated by a centric fusion between the original Y chromosome and a large autosome. In male meiosis the X1X2Y (=XXAY) multiple sex chromosomes form a classical trivalent configuration. E. maussi is the first species discovered in the class Amphibia that is distinguished by a system of multiple sex chromosomes. Only one single male was found in the population with 2n=36 chromosomes and lacking the Y-autosomal fusion. This karyotype (XYAA) is interpreted as the ancestral condition, preceding the occurrence of the Y-autosome fusion.by H.C. Macgregor  相似文献   

6.
J. Puro  S. Nokkala 《Chromosoma》1977,63(3):273-286
A new technique was developed for a light microscopic analysis of meiosis in Drosophila oocytes. — When the nuclear envelope breaks down the bivalents, till then compressed into a karyosome, separate in early prometaphase. The homologues remain associated by chiasmata except for the fourth chromosomes which are no longer associated. Non-homologous chromosomes regularly segregating from each other in genetic experiments are also unconnected after karyosome disintegration but during metaphase I the fourth chromosomes and the heterologous pairs coorient on the same arc of the spindle and move precociously towards opposite poles. Nondisjunction and other irregularities are not infrequent in oocytes having an uneven number of achiasmatic elements. The fourth chromosomes and the Xs or the large autosomes, when lacking chiasmata, may be involved in non-homologous segregation. In c3G homozygotes all chromosomes appear as univalents in prometaphase. Segregation is variable but the observations suggest the polar distribution of equal numbers of chromosomes in variable combinations irrespective of the size. — Coorientation of univalents may be accounted for if the centromeres, whether homologous or non-homologous, are associated in pairs during early meiotic prophase, and that in the karyosome these pairing relationships are preserved until spindle organization at the onset of prometaphase.  相似文献   

7.
Summary A wide diversity in chromosome complement is found in two species of phasmids of the primitive group Prisopini—Prisopus ariadne Hebard and Prisopus berosus Westwood. P. ariadne has a diploid male complement of 28, comprising 13 pairs of relatively large mediokinetic autosomes and Neo XY sex chromosomes. P. berosus, 2n =49, has relatively small autosomes most of which are mediokinetic, and retains the XO—XX sex mechanism. Chromosomal polymorphism in this species is suggested by the presence of an unequal pair of autosomes and a structural differentiation in the X in one of two males studied.The relative amount of DNA per nucleus in male germ cells (Peulgen cytophotometry) shows a significant difference in total chromosomal content between the complements of the two species.These data are discussed with reference to the cytotaxonomy of phasmids.Supported in part by research grant G-4370 from the National Institutes of Health, Public Health Service.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The distinguishing cytological characters, including chromosome number and sex chromosome mechanism, have been tabulated for all mantids thus far studied cytologically—including 16 species (starred in Table 1) not hitherto examined. Data on 46 species in 17 subfamilies are reviewed.The XO—XX sex chromosome mechanism represents the ancestral condition for the family and has been retained in 14 of the subfamilies sampled.The distribution of the X1X2Y—X1X1X2X2 mechanism, previously known in the subfamilies Manteinae and Choeradodinae, is extended to include Mellierinae, Acromantinae and Vatinae.Cytological evidence indicates a monophyletic origin of the compound sex chromosomes and necessitates a reconsideration of the taxonomic association of XO and X1X2Y forms in the same subfamily, specifically of Miomantis and Callimantis with the other Manteinae, and Aethalocroa with Vates and Phyllovates in the Vatinae.The pre-metaphase stretch is established as a regular stage in male meiosis in 14—and is absent in 3—of the species checked for this character. It should prove of taxonomic value when a wider sampling of the lower categories is available.The prolongation of parallel pairing of homologous chromosomes in male meiosis appears to be characteristic of the Manteidae as a whole. No correlation is apparent between the degree of its expression and taxonomic category. Since it provides a mechanism, additional or alternative to chiasmata, for the post-pachytene association of homologues, its establishment permits the evolution of non-chiasmate meiosis in the group.Two structural types of bivalents—one with, one without chiasmata—are found. Present evidence favors the multiple origin of the non-chiasmate type within the family, and since both types may coexist in the karyotype of the same sex of a single species, presence or absence of chiasmata cannot be considered a valid taxonomic criterion.  相似文献   

9.
Detailed meiotic analysis in 28 North West Himalayan populations of dioecious plant Rumex acetosa L. was carried out. The species is generally discussed as an important plant having sex chromosomes. Male meiosis in all the studied populations clearly showed the formation of six bivalents and one trivalent during diakinesis and metaphase-I. The sex chromosomes in male plants exhibit a chain of trivalent (Y1–X–Y2). In addition, among the presently investigated populations ring-shaped trivalents were also observed for the first time in the species. Varied frequency of abnormal segregation of sex trivalent was also observed leading to XY:Y segregation instead of normal X:Y1Y2 segregation. A majority of the populations exhibit normal meiosis. Plants of six populations show meiotic abnormalities like cytomixis, laggards, bridges, chromatin stickiness, etc., leading to reduced pollen fertility. Translocation between an autosome and sex chromosomes was also observed in some of the populations. 0–1B chromosomes were noticed in one population. This is the first ever meiotic analysis of the species from India.  相似文献   

10.
The chromosomes of the South American marsupial frogs Gastrotheca fissipes, G. ovifera, G. walkeri and Flectonotus pygmaeus were analyzed by means of conventional and various banding techniques. The karyotypes of G. ovifera and G. walkeri are characterized by highly differentiated XY/XX sex chromosomes. Whereas the X chromosomes and autosomes contain large amounts of constitutive heterochromatin, extremely little heterochromatin is located in the Y chromosomes. This is in contrast to all previously known amphibian Y chromosomes and the Y chromosomes of most other vertebrates. In the male meiosis of G. walkeri, the euchromatic segments of the heteromorphic XY chromosomes show the same pairing configuration as the autosomal bivalents. The karyotype of F. pygmaeus is remarkable for the unique presence of telocentric chromosomes and the high frequency of interstitially located chiasmata in the meiotic bivalents. The evolution of the karyotypes and sex chromosomes, the structure of the various classes of heterochromatin and the data obtained from meiotic analyses of the marsupial hylids are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
In meiosis I, homologous chromosomes combine to form bivalents, which align on the metaphase plate. Homologous chromosomes then separate in anaphase I. Univalent sex chromosomes, on the other hand, are unable to segregate in the same way as homologous chromosomes of bivalents due to their lack of a homologous pairing partner in meiosis I. Here, we studied univalent segregation in a Hemipteran insect: the spittlebug Philaenus spumarius. We determined the chromosome number and sex determination mechanism in our population of P. spumarius and showed that, in male meiosis I, there is a univalent X chromosome. We discovered that the univalent X chromosome in primary spermatocytes forms an amphitelic attachment to the spindle and aligns on the metaphase plate with the autosomes. Interestingly, the X chromosome remains at spindle midzone long after the autosomes have separated. In late anaphase I, the X chromosome initiates movement towards one spindle pole. This movement appears to be correlated with a loss of microtubule connections between the kinetochore of one chromatid and its associated spindle pole.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Cytogenetic studies were made with particular emphasis on the sex-determining mechanism in Rumex acetosella (6 x = 42) and its hybrids (F 1, F 2, BC 1 and BC 2) with R. hastatulus (synthetic 4 x = 16 = 4 A +4 X = and 4 x = 18 = 4 A + 2 (X Y 1 Y 2) = ). Rumex acetosella was almost strictly dioecious with 5050 male and female. Breeding tests revealed that the males were heterogametic. The longest chromosomes (S), usually two, are the sex chromosomes of this hexaploid species. The S chromosomes are homomorphic in both male and female. The sex chromosome: autosome ratios, and the strong epistatic male effect of the S M chromosome in the polyploid dioecious species and in the hybrids, are evidence of an X/Y Melandrium type sex-determining mechanism controlled by a single pair of homomorphic sex chromosomes. Thus, the sex chromosome formula of the males was S F S M and that of females was S F S F. The present approach is a new method for resolving the sex-determining mechanism in a dioecious species.  相似文献   

13.
The chromosomes of the newly discovered South American marsupial frogGastrotheca pseustes were analyzed by conventional methods and by various banding techniques. This species is characterized by XY/XX sex chromosomes and the existence of two different morphs of Y chromosomes. Whereas in type A males the XYA chromosomes are still homomorphic, in type B males the YB chromosome displays a large heterochromatic region at the long arm telomere which is absent in the X. In male meiosis, the homomorphic XYA chromosomes exhibit the same pairing configuration as the autosomal bivalents. On the other hand, the heteromorphic XYB chromosomes form a sex bivalent by pairing their short arm telomeres in a characteristic end-to-end arrangement. Analysis of the karyotypes by C-banding and DNA base pair-specific fluorochromes reveals enormous interindividual size variability of the autosomal heterochromatin.  相似文献   

14.
Five species of the subfamily Thericleinae from East Africa show various types of cryptochiasmatic meiosis in the male, in which the chiasmata are not visible in prophase and are only revealed in the course of first metaphase. Several of these species have very large chromosomes. Two species belonging to the subfamily Miraculinae, from Madagascar have 2 n=25 acrocentric chromosomes, the highest number known in the Eumastacidae. Their meiosis is of the normal type. — Eighteen species of the subfamily Pseudoschmidtiinae, also from Madagascar have, for the most part, small chromosomes and a very uniform karyotype, of 2 n=21 acrocentrics. A species of Xenomastax has acquired an X1X2Y sex chromosome mechanism as a result of two successive chromosomal fusions. A fusion beween autosomes has reduced the chromosome number to 2 n=19 in the genus Tetefortina. The male meiosis of the Pseudoschmidtiinae is quite orthodox. — Two species of Eumastacids belonging to the subfamily Mastacideinae, from South India, show 2 n=21 acrocentrics. The male meiosis is quite orthodox, with a rather high chiasma frequency. — Three South American species of Eumastacidae, belonging to the subfamilies Paramastacinae, Parepisactinae and Eumastacinae respectively, have karyotypes which seem to be very different from those of the Old World subfamilies that have been studied. Meiosis is normal.The cytological evidence thus confirms the view of systematists that the evolutionary divergence of the subfamilies of Eumastacidae is very considerable, and presumably ancient. As far as we can tell, each subfamily may be characterized by a typical or primitive karyotype. There have been fewer evolutionary fusions of chromosomes in the Thericleinae and Pseudoschmidtiinae than in the Morabinae and no chromosomal dissociations are known to have occurred in the two former subfamilies.Affectionately dedicated to Sally Hughes-Schrader, whose work has enlarged our cytogenetic horizons so greatly, on her 75th birthday, January 25, 1970.Supported by Public Health Service Grant No. GM-07212 from the Division of General Medical Sciences, U.S. National Institutes of Health and by a grant from the Australian Research Grants Committee.  相似文献   

15.
The order Monotremata, comprising the platypus and two species of echidna (Australian and Nuigini) is the only extant representative of the mammalian subclass Prototheria, which diverged from subclass Theria (marsupials and placental mammals) 150–200 million years ago. The 2n=63, 64 karyotype (newly described here) of the Nuigini echidna is almost identical in morphology and G-band pattern to that of the Australian echidna, from which it diverged about a million years ago. The karyotype of the platypus (2n=52) has several features in common with those of the echidna species; six pairs of large autosomes, many pairs of small (but not micro-) chromosomes, and a series of small unpaired chromosomes which form a multivalent at meiosis. Comparison of the G-band patterns of platypus and echidna autosomes reveals considerable homology. Chromomycin banding demonstrates GC-rich heterochromatin at the centromeres of many platypus and echidna chromosomes, and at the nucleolar organizing regions; some of this heterochromatin C-bands weakly in platypus (but not echidna) spreads. Late replication banding patterns resemble G-banding patterns and confirm the homologies between the species. Striking heteromorphism between chromosomes of some of the large autosomal pairs can be accounted for in the echidna by differences in amount of chromomycin-bright, late replicating heterochromatin. The sex chromosomes in all three species also bear striking homology, despite the difference in sex determination mechanism between platypus (XX/XY) and the echidna species (X1X1X2X2/X1X2Y). The platypus X and echidna X1 each represent about 5.8% of haploid chromosome length, and are G-band identical. Y chromosomes are similar between species, and are largely homologous to the X (or X1).  相似文献   

16.
Chromosoma Focus     
Bruce D. McKee 《Chromosoma》1996,105(3):135-141
  相似文献   

17.
Karyotype variation in dermestid beetles   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
B. John  D. D. Shaw 《Chromosoma》1967,20(4):371-385
The system of nucleolar controlled sex-chromosome segregation which characterises Xyp species of hide beetles is also present in the one species (haemorrhoidalis) with an XY system. This, coupled with the fact that the karyotype in the XY species is asymmetrical, whereas species with smaller y-chromosomes show greater symmetry, suggests that erosion of the y may have involved translocation of the material of the y onto the autosomes rather than simple loss. Finally, supernumerary y chromosomes present in laboratory cultures of two species (maculatus and frischii) demonstrate the efficiency of the sex nucleolus as a mechanism for securing segregation.  相似文献   

18.
Male meiosis in autotetraploid Allium tuberosum (4×=32) is fairly regular, keeping in view its cytological status, with 81 percent of the chromosomes associated in quadrivalents and trivalents. About 5% of the cells have 32 univalents. Anaphase segregation is slightly irregular. While 48% of the pollen mitoses show 16 chromosomes, 87% of the mature pollen is viable as indicated by carmine or iodine staining. — Megaspore mother cells have 64 chromosomes associated in 32 bivalents at metaphase I. Anaphase segregation is normal. In three out of 56 cells studied multivalents, bivalents and univalents are observed as in male meiosis. — It is concluded that the species reproduces by pseudogamous parthenogenesis made possible by meiotic modification. This modification is almost perfect and almost completely specific for female meiosis. Slight effects are observed in male meiosis.  相似文献   

19.
Spermatogenesis in the F1 hybrid (2n=24=12 +12 ) between the closely related newt species T. cristatus carnifex and T. marmoratus was apparently normal up to pachytene. Many unpaired chromosomes were present at diplotene and a typical diakinesis was lacking. Primary spermatocytes at meta-and meta-anaphase contained up to 12 regular intergenomal bivalents and a corresponding number of univalents when less then 12 II. Most chiasmata were terminal or subterminal, some intercalary. Chiasmata between corresponding heterospecific chromosomes can be reported as true: real crossing over has taken place, proving the presence of primary chromosomal homologies between the 2 sets of the parental species. Evidence for recombination is based on the segregation of particular markers (i.e., subterminal C-bands and NORs) observed in certain chromosomes at metaphase II. One chromatid of single chromosomes can show the T. cristatus phenotype and the other the T. marmoratus phenotype. A few primary spermatocytes contain a certain number of irregular associations (intragenomal or intrahaploid bivalents, irregular intergenomal bivalents, chromosome multivalents) joined by chiasmata which can be defined as anomalous. Other abnormalities concern the occurrence of interlocked bivalents which occasionally show an anomalous exchange between heterologous chromatids. — Cytogenetic criteria useful to evaluate the taxonomic relationships between different species have been discussed as well as some possible trends in chromosome evolution and speciation within the genus Triturus.  相似文献   

20.

Background

Sex-determining systems have evolved independently in vertebrates. Placental mammals and marsupials have an XY system, birds have a ZW system. Reptiles and amphibians have different systems, including temperature-dependent sex determination, and XY and ZW systems that differ in origin from birds and placental mammals. Monotremes diverged early in mammalian evolution, just after the mammalian clade diverged from the sauropsid clade. Our previous studies showed that male platypus has five X and five Y chromosomes, no SRY, and DMRT1 on an X chromosome. In order to investigate monotreme sex chromosome evolution, we performed a comparative study of platypus and echidna by chromosome painting and comparative gene mapping.

Results

Chromosome painting reveals a meiotic chain of nine sex chromosomes in the male echidna and establishes their order in the chain. Two of those differ from those in the platypus, three of the platypus sex chromosomes differ from those of the echidna and the order of several chromosomes is rearranged. Comparative gene mapping shows that, in addition to bird autosome regions, regions of bird Z chromosomes are homologous to regions in four platypus X chromosomes, that is, X1, X2, X3, X5, and in chromosome Y1.

Conclusion

Monotreme sex chromosomes are easiest to explain on the hypothesis that autosomes were added sequentially to the translocation chain, with the final additions after platypus and echidna divergence. Genome sequencing and contig anchoring show no homology yet between platypus and therian Xs; thus, monotremes have a unique XY sex chromosome system that shares some homology with the avian Z.  相似文献   

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