THE X CHROMOSOMES OF MAMMALS: KARYOLOGICAL HOMOLOGY AS REVEALED BY BANDING TECHNIQUES
Open Access
- 1 October 1974
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 78 (2) , 703-714
- https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/78.2.703
Abstract
A comparison of the Giemsa-banding patterns of the X chromosomes in various mammalian species including man indicates that two major bands (A and B), which are resistant to trypsin and urea-treatments, are always present irrespective of the gross morphology of the X chromosomes. This is true in all mammalian species with the "original or standard type" X chromosomes (5-6% of the haploid genome) thus far analyzed. In the unusually large-sized X chromosomes the extra chromosomal material may be due either to the addition of genetically inert constitutive heterochromatin or to an X-autosome translocation. In these X chromosomes two major bands are present in the actual X-chromosome segment. Our data on C and G band patterns also support Ohno's hypothesis that the mammalian X chromosome is extremely conservative in its genetic content, in spite of its cytogenetic variability.Keywords
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