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Three stages of meiotic homologous chromosome pairing in wheat: cognition, alignment and synapsis

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Abstract

 Chromosome painting enabled the study of homologous chromosome behaviour prior to and during meiosis. Total genomic DNA from rye, used as a probe for in situ hybridization, identified the rye chromosome arm in a wheat-rye translocation line (T5AS·5RL) at meiotic prophase and the preceding interphase. Accurate staging of the development of the meiocytes was attained by parallel studies of chromatin morphology, nucleolar behaviour and synaptonemal complex formation in electron microscopy thin sections and silver-stained surface spreads. Three stages of pairing were identified for the large cereal genomes that are organized in a Rabl configuration: first, cognition occurs during the long interphase before leptotene, bringing the homologous chromosome domains into close proximity and possibly starting at the centromere; second, homologous chromosome segments align at late leptotene; and third, zygotene synapsis initiates near the telomere, although it was also observed to occur near the centromere. A pairing model is proposed for wheat, with a genome size of 17000 Mbp, that shows prallels to and notable differences from yeast and mammalian models of meiosis.

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Received: 25 January 1997 / Revision accepted: 14 July 1997

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Schwarzacher, T. Three stages of meiotic homologous chromosome pairing in wheat: cognition, alignment and synapsis. Sex Plant Reprod 10, 324–331 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004970050106

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004970050106

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