dense chromatin
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Zygote ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 24 (5) ◽  
pp. 700-706 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jilun Hou ◽  
Guixing Wang ◽  
Xiaoyan Zhang ◽  
Haijin Liu

SummaryThe effect of hydrostatic pressure treatment on the induction of mitogynogenesis in the eggs of Japanese flounder Paralichthys olivaceus (Temminck et Schlegel) by using heterospecific sperm were studied. Before treatment, the eggs were at metaphase of the first mitosis. The spindle was disassembled by the treatment and then resembled in its pretreatment position, and the chromosomes were rearranged, i.e., the first mitosis was not blocked. During the second mitotic cycle, only a monopolar spindle was assembled in each blastomere and the chromosomes doubled, but cell cleavage was blocked. In the third cycle, mitosis proceeded normally with a bipolar spindle in each blastomere. Flow cytometric analysis of ploidy demonstrated that mitogynogenetic larvae were all diploid. The ultraviolet light-irradiated sperm of the red sea bream (Pagrus major) was condensed, formed a dense chromatin body, and randomly entered one blastomere.


2014 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. 201-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Kwiatkowska ◽  
Andrzej Kaźmierczak ◽  
Katarzyna Popłońska

Ultrastructure of a spermatid nucleus changes many times during spermiogenesis. Condensed chromatin forms irregular clusters during phases I-II, a continuous ring adjacent to a nuclear envelope during phases III-V and a network occupying the whole nucleus during phase VI. In advanced spermiogenesis dense chromatin disappears and short randomly positioned fibrils arise, then long parallel ones are found (phase VIII) which during phase IX form a lamellar structure. In mature spermatozoids (phase X) chromatin becomes extremely condensed. <sup>3</sup>H-arginine and <sup>3</sup>H-lysine incorporation into spermatids during 2-min incubation is intensive during phases IN, decreases during phases VI, VII and becomes very low during phases VIII-IX. Capillary electrophoresis has shown that during <em>Chara tomentosa</em> spermiogenesis replacement of histones with basic proteins whose mobility is comparable to that of salmon protamines takes place. At the beginning of spermiogenesis core and linker histones are found in spermatids. During early spermiogenesis protamine-like proteins appear and their amount increases in late spermiogenesis when core histones are still present. In mature spermatozoids only protamine-like proteins represented by 3 fractions: 9.1 kDa, 9.6 kDa, 11.2 kDa are found. Disappearance of linker histones following their modification precedes disappearance of core histones. The results indicate that dynamic rearrangement of chromatin ultrastructure and aminoacid incorporation rate during spermiogenesis are reflected in basic nuclear protein changes.


Science ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 337 (6097) ◽  
pp. 971-975 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Yuan ◽  
T. Wu ◽  
H. Fu ◽  
C. Dai ◽  
H. Wu ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 503-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isaac Gállego ◽  
Pablo Castro-Hartmann ◽  
Juan Manuel Caravaca ◽  
Silvia Caño ◽  
Joan-Ramon Daban

Author(s):  
Gaël Le Pennec ◽  
Nejla Aloui-Bejaoui ◽  
Marcel Le Pennec

Gonad of the Mediterranean pectinid Flexopecten glaber was studied in order to describe the morphology and the ultrastructural characteristics of the mature spermatozoa. The spermatozoon has a 2.5 μm pyriform head and a 40–45 μm flagellum. The four mitochondria of the mid-piece are 0.6 μm in diameter. The nucleus contains dense chromatin fibres and possesses two depressions: a wide (0.19 μm) and deep (0.58 μm) sub-acrosomal one, and the other at the base of the head, less deep (0.36 μm) and less wide (0.12 μm). The objective was to situate this scallop in the phylogenetic diagrams found in the literature concerning the commercial pectinid species.


2006 ◽  
Vol 172 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jill M. Brown ◽  
Joanne Leach ◽  
Joyce E. Reittie ◽  
Ann Atzberger ◽  
Jane Lee-Prudhoe ◽  
...  

The organization of genes within the nucleus may influence transcription. We have analyzed the nuclear positioning of the coordinately regulated α- and β-globin genes and show that the gene-dense chromatin surrounding the human α-globin genes is frequently decondensed, independent of transcription. Against this background, we show the frequent juxtaposition of active α- and β-globin genes and of homologous α-globin loci that occurs at nuclear speckles and correlates with transcription. However, we did not see increased colocalization of signals, which would be expected with direct physical interaction. The same degree of proximity does not occur between human β-globin genes or between murine globin genes, which are more constrained to their chromosome territories. Our findings suggest that the distribution of globin genes within erythroblast nuclei is the result of a self-organizing process, involving transcriptional status, diffusional ability of chromatin, and physical interactions with nuclear proteins, rather than a directed form of higher-order control.


Genome ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 580-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joke F.A van Vugt ◽  
Merijn Salverda ◽  
J Hans de Jong ◽  
Richard Stouthamer

A recently discovered B chromosome in the parasitoid wasp Trichogramma kaykai was found to be transmitted through males only. Shortly after fertilization, this chromosome eliminates the paternal chromosome set leaving the maternal chromosomes and itself intact. Consequently, the sex ratio in these wasps is changed in favour of males by modifying fertilized diploid eggs into male haploid offspring. In this study, we show that in fertilized eggs at the first mitosis the paternal sex ratio (PSR) chromosome condenses the paternal chromosomes into a so-called paternal chromatin mass (PCM). During this process, the PSR chromosome is morphologically unaffected and is incorporated into the nucleus containing the maternal chromosomes. In the first five mitotic divisions, 67% of the PCMs are associated with one of the nuclei in the embryo. Furthermore, in embryos with an unassociated PCM, all nuclei are at the same mitotic stage, whereas 68% of the PCM-associated nuclei are at a different mitotic phase than the other nuclei in the embryo. Our observations reveal an obvious similarity of the mode of action of the PSR chromosome in T. kaykai with that of the PSR-induced paternal genome loss in the unrelated wasp Nasonia vitripennis.Key words: paternal sex ratio, PSR, Trichogramma kaykai, B chromosome, paternal chromatin mass, embryogenesis.


1999 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 3624-3634 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Huang ◽  
James F. Smothers ◽  
Emily A. Wiley ◽  
C. David Allis

ABSTRACT Heterochromatin represents a specialized chromatin environment vital to both the repression and expression of certain eukaryotic genes. One of the best-studied heterochromatin-associated proteins isDrosophila HP1. In this report, we have disrupted all somatic copies of the Tetrahymena HHP1 gene, which encodes an HP1-like protein, Hhp1p, in macronuclei (H. Huang, E. A. Wiley, R. C. Lending, and C. D. Allis, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95:13624–13629, 1998). Unlike the Drosophila HP1 gene,HHP1 is not essential in Tetrahymena spp., and during vegetative growth no clear phenotype is observed in cells lacking Hhp1p (ΔHHP1). However, during a shift to nongrowth conditions, the survival rate of ΔHHP1 cells is reduced compared to that of wild-type cells. Upon starvation, Hhp1p becomes hyperphosphorylated concomitant with a reduction in macronuclear volume and an increase in the size of electron-dense chromatin bodies; neither of these morphological changes occurs in the absence of Hhp1p. Activation of two starvation-induced genes (ngoA and CyP) is significantly reduced in ΔHHP1 cells while, in contrast, the expression of several growth-related or constitutively expressed genes is comparable to that in wild-type cells. These results suggest that Hhp1p functions in the establishment and/or maintenance of a specialized condensed chromatin environment that facilitates the expression of certain genes linked to a starvation-induced response.


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