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Observations on the cytology of Bipes (Amphisbaenia) with special reference to its lampbrush chromosomes
Authors:Herbert Macgregor  Lorrie Klosterman
Institution:(1) Department of Zoology, University of Leicester, LE1 7RH Leicester, England;(2) Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, 94720 Berkeley, California, USA
Abstract:The positions and general anatomical and histological characteristics of the gonads of Bipes biporus and B. canaliculatus are described. The amounts of DNA per haploid chromosome set have been measured in both species, the values being 1.83 and 2.0 pg for biporus and canaliculatus respectively. The karyotypes of both species are described on the basis of data from mitotic and meiotic metaphase chromosome sets and from lampbrush chromosomes. B. biporus has 10 macrochromosomes and 11 microchromosomes. B. canaliculatus has 11 macrochromosomes and 11 microchromosomes. The karyotypes of the two species differ distinctly with regard to the shapes of 3 of the macrochromosomes. Chiasma distribution is described for male meiosis in B. biporus. Studies of the lampbrush chromosomes of both species show the chiasma distribution in the female to be generally similar to that found in the male biporus. In B. canaliculatus, lampbrush chromosomes with maximally extended lateral loops are found in oocytes that are oblate spheroids measuring 0.7×1.0 mm along their short and long axes respectively, these being well before the start of the major phase of vitellogenesis. Smaller oocytes have more distinct chromomeres and shorter loops. Microchromosomes take the form of typical small lampbrush chromosomes in oocytes. There are at the most 1,000 chromomeres per haploid set of lampbrush chromosomes in B. canaliculatus. Chiasmata are described from lampbrush preparations in which the two half-bivalents are firmly attached to one another without evident association of their axes, indicating the possibility of chiasmate association between the DNA axes of lateral loops. There are remarkably few extrachromosomal nucleoli in Bipes oocytes, and its is suggested that this may indicate a level of ribosomal gene amplification that is much lower than that found in fish and Amphibia. The observations are particularly discussed in relation to current ideas concerning the structure and function of lampbrush chromosomes.
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