Polyploidization and endomitosis in giant cells of rabbit trophoblast

Abstract
Morphological and cytophotometric investigations have been performed on giant cells of the rabbit trophoblast to reveal a mechanism of nuclei polyploidization and define the level of polyploidy. The character of endomitotic chromosomes is found to differ and depend largely on the degree of nuclei polyploidy. Small chromosomes were found in nuclei with low levels of polyploidy. For highly polyploid nuclei, two stages are distinguished. In the first case condensed chromosomes join into bundles resembling Riesenchromosomen in plants, whereas in the second, decondensed chromosomal threads separate and disperse in the karyoplasm. The splitting does not involve nuclei-forming chromosomes in the region of the nucleolar organiser. The degree of polyploidy was determined on the 15th day of development. It was found that giant cell nuclei contain DNA in amounts corresponding to 32–512 chromosomal sets. Most of the nuclei have levels of 128c and 256c. Highly-polyploid nuclei disintegrate into small nuclei with the degree of polyploidy varying from 1c to 32c. Di-, tri- and tetraploid nuclei predominate.

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