scholarly journals Preferential meiotic chromosome pairing among homologous chromosomes with cryptic sequence variation in tetraploid maize

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guilherme T. Braz ◽  
Fan Yu ◽  
Hainan Zhao ◽  
Zuhu Deng ◽  
James A. Birchler ◽  
...  

Meiotic chromosome pairing is a process that is amenable to genetic and experimental analysis. The combined use of these two approaches allows for the process to be dissected into several finite periods of time in which the developmental stages of pairing can be precisely located. Evidence is now available, in particular in plants, that shows that the pairing of homologous chromosomes, as observed at metaphase I, is affected by events occurring as early as the last premeiotic mitosis; and that the maintenance of this early determined state is subsequently maintained by constituents (presumably proteins) that are sensitive to either colchicine, temperature or gene control. A critical assessment of this evidence in wheat and a comparison of the process of pairing in wheat with the course of meiotic pairing in other plants and animals is presented.


Genetics ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 139 (4) ◽  
pp. 1511-1520 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Loidl

Abstract Meiotic chromosome pairing in isogenic triploid and tetraploid strains of yeast and the consequences of polyploidy on meiotic chromosome segregation are studied. Synaptonemal complex formation at pachytene was found to be different in the triploid and in the tetraploid. In the triploid, triple-synapsis, that is, the connection of three homologues at a given site, is common. It can even extend all the way along the chromosomes. In the tetraploid, homologous chromosomes mostly come in pairs of synapsed bivalents. Multiple synapsis, that is, synapsis of more than two homologues in one and the same region, was virtually absent in the tetraploid. About five quadrivalents per cell occurred due to the switching of pairing partners. From the frequency of pairing partner switches it can be deduced that in most chromosomes synapsis is initiated primarily at one end, occasionally at both ends and rarely at an additional intercalary position. In contrast to a considerably reduced spore viability (approximately 40%) in the triploid, spore viability is only mildly affected in the tetraploid. The good spore viability is presumably due to the low frequency of quadrivalents and to the highly regular 2:2 segregation of the few quadrivalents that do occur. Occasionally, however, quadrivalents appear to be subject to 3:1 nondisjunction that leads to spore death in the second generation.


1970 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-63
Author(s):  
P. B. MOENS

In the autotetraploid Lilium longiflorum (4n = 48), there are 12 sets of 4 homologous chromosomes. Within each set of 4 homologues, switches of pairing partners and crossovers occur at meiotic prophase. At the fine-structural level, the behaviour of the chromosomes is reflected in the switches between the axial cores of the homologous chromosomes. The normal synaptonemal complexes of the autotetraploid are compared with the complexes of the allotriploid L. tigrinum, which have synaptonemal complexes with abnormal lateral elements. The possibility that the deformed lateral elements are the products of heteromorphisms between‘homologues’ is explored in the discussion. The observations on the chromosome cores are interpreted as support for the notion that the cores may be associated with the recombinationally active hereditary material during meiotic prophase.


1986 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 278-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. M. Nowick

Meiotic chromosome pairing was examined in F1 hybrid regenerants from Oryza sativa (AA) × O. latifolia (CCDD) and O. glumaepatula (AcuAcu) × O. latifolia (CCDD) crosses produced through embryo culture. The average number of chromosome pairs in the O. sativa × O. latifolia regenerants ranged from 13.79 to 14.79. Ten to 18 bivalents were observed per cell. The average number of bivalents in the O. glumaepatula × O. latifolia regenerants ranged from 12.44 to 13.87, with 10–17 bivalents per cell. Some desynapsis occurred but 10 to 12 true bivalents remained at late metaphase in most cells. The high number of bivalents observed in the hybrids from these divergent parents indicates that a genetic system for pairing control similar to that in Triticum may be present in the Oryza genus.Key words: Oryza, embryo culture, meiosis.


Heredity ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Loidl ◽  
F Ehrendorfer ◽  
D Schweizer

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