| Literature DB >> 8697808 |
P D Thomsen1, B Høyheim, K Christensen.
Abstract
The chromosomes of the babirusa, a species considered to have diverged from an ancestor of the pig during the Miocene epoch, about 12-26 million years ago, were studied to determine the sites of recent rearrangements during evolution of the domestic pig. It is shown that there is a pericentric inversion of the entire short arm on pig chromosome 1, compared to its counterpart in the babirusa (chromosome 15). We also present evidence suggesting that pig chromosome 3 was derived by a telomere-centromere fusion of two ancestral chromosomes homoelogous to babirusa chromosomes 12 and 17. Likewise, we conclude that pig chromosome 6 was most likely derived by a telomere-telomere fusion of ancestral chromosomes homoelogous to babirusa chromosomes 6 and 14. The detection of interstitial hybridization signals from presumptive subteloemeric repeats in the same chromosome region as the evolutionary fusion points on pig chromosomes 3 and 6 indicates that the fusion sites may still contain elements that are otherwise restricted to the telomere regions of pig chromosomes.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8697808 DOI: 10.1159/000134339
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytogenet Cell Genet ISSN: 0301-0171