Two kinds of "recombination nodules" in Neurospora crassa
- 1 April 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Genome
- Vol. 32 (2) , 309-317
- https://doi.org/10.1139/g89-446
Abstract
Two morphological types of recombination nodules, termed early and late, are recognized in Neurospora crassa. Eighty nuclei at different substages were used to determine numbers of nodules per nucleus, distribution of nodules along the nucleolus-organizing chromosome, and distribution of nodules among the two largest chromosomes. Early nodules appear at the synaptonemal complex at early zygotene and increase in number during zygotene until a dramatic reduction occurs at zygotene-pachytene transition. Thereafter early nodules are steadily eliminated until they disappear by diplotene. Late nodules are also present during xygotene. Their number doubles at the xygotene-pachytene transition and stays at this level until diplotene. The total number of nodules is rather consistant through zygotene and pachtene. Distribution of bivalents with 0, 1, 2, etc. nodules follows a Poisson distribution at zygotene, but not at pachytene, where variance is less than the mean, indicating positive interference. Nodules are distributed nonrandomly along the nucleolus-organizer bivalent. The pattern differs slightly in nuclei of different origin. Nuclei with unusual synaptonemal complex sustain normal levels of recombination by having the same amount of nodules as normal nuclei. In abnormal nuclei nodules are preferentially associated with normal segements. It is proposed that early nodules do not participate in any form of recombination but have a role in finding an appropriate site for a crossing-over event. Morphological change to the late type indicates that the site has been reached and the exchange event can be mediated by the late nodule.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Human meiosis VII. Chiasma formation in human spermatocytesCarlsberg Research Communications, 1983
- Human meiosis VI. Crossing over in human spermatocytesCarlsberg Research Communications, 1983
- Chromosome pairing, recombination nodules and chiasma formation in diploid Bombyx malesCarlsberg Research Communications, 1980