Cytological analyses of a 14p+variant by means of N-banding and combinations of silver staining and chromosome bandings
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Human Genetics
- Vol. 46 (1) , 75-82
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00278904
Abstract
An inherited human karyological variant (14p+) has been studied with a number of cytochemical techniques. The short arm of this variant chromosome 14 is nearly as long as the long arm, giving the chromosome a submetacentric to metacentric appearance. In conventionally Giemsa-stained preparations, a maximum of three secondary constrictions can be observed in the marker arm. The secondary constrictions are silver-positive in Ag-NOR preparations. However, the entire arm stains deeply in N-banded preparations. The 14p+ arm also Q-negative, C-negative, G-negative, and R-positive with an almost homogeneous texture. The difference between N-banding and silver staining is interpreted as the result of gene activities of the ribosomal cistrons.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nucleolus organizer and N-band distribution in morphologic and fluorescence variants of human chromosomesHuman Genetics, 1977
- A Novel Chromosome Abnormality in Human Neuroblastoma and Antifolate-Resistant Chinese Hamster Cell Lines in Culture 1 2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1976
- An improved technique for selective silver staining of nucleolar organizer regions in human chromosomesHuman Genetics, 1976
- Nucleolus organizer and satellite association in a variant D-group chromosomeHuman Genetics, 1976
- rDNA and acrocentric chromosomes in manHuman Genetics, 1976
- A simple R banding technic.1975
- Location of nucleolar organizers in animal and plant chromosomes by means of an improved N-banding techniqueChromosoma, 1975
- Cytogenetic and linkage studies of a familial 15pplus variant.1974
- Double satellites: Autoradiographic study of a chromosomal marker observed in two generationsHuman Genetics, 1971
- Ein Fall mit balancierter (14p+; 15p?)-TranslokationHuman Genetics, 1970