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Synaptonemal complex analysis in Talpa occidentalis spermatocytes (Insectivora, Mammalia). II. Evolution of the X-chromosome self-pairing process
Authors:R Jiménez  M Burgos  A Sánchez  R Díaz de la Guardia
Affiliation:Departamento de Biología Animal, Ecología y Genética, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, Spain.
Abstract:Zygotene and pachytene configurations of the X chromosome were studied in whole-mount, silver-stained preparations of spermatocytes from XY males from a population of Talpa occidentalis in which sex reversal has been described. The most striking finding in this study was a self-pairing conformation of the axial (differential) element of the X chromosome. This self-pairing was markedly constant in the site of initiation, which invariably involved the distal free end of the X and the region beyond the X-Y pairing segment, so that X-Y synapsis was never disturbed. In addition, self-pairing occurred later than autosomal synapsis and was accompanied by thickening of the axes, although this seemed to occur after the formation of an ordinary synaptonemal complex. The etiology of this phenomenon may be based on residual homology, possibly due to conservation of a primitive isochromosome throughout the karyotypic evolution of this species. However, the possible relationship between self-pairing and sex reversal remains obscure.
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