Literature DB >> 9609662

Tandem duplication of nucleolus organizer region (NOR) in the Japanese macaque, Macaca fuscata fuscata.

H Hirai1, Y Hasegawa, Y Kawamoto, E Tokita.   

Abstract

During exploration of chromosome polymorphisms in Japanese macaques, a heteromorphic polymorphism was found in a population in the Zigokudani monkey park. The population consisted of three troops (social units). Of 36 monkeys examined, five females showed heterozygotic 'marker' chromosome (chromosome 9). The polymorphism was a tandem duplication of the nucleolus organizer region (NOR) of the short arm of chromosome 9, which was found for the first time in the genus Macaca. FISH and fibre-FISH using human 18S rDNA and sequential silver nitrate staining revealed that the duplicated region included a part of the euchromatic satellite and the stalk and that the euchromatic block (intercalary satellite) divided the NOR into two parts (distal and proximal). Furthermore, it showed that the distal region possessed much more rDNA than the proximal region, and that the duplications might have been introduced via a mechanism of gene amplification (inverted duplications associated with over-replication and recombination events). As the tandem duplication was observed sporadically in four maternal pedigrees in two troops and the mothers of the variants all had normal chromosomes, the variation might have been introduced from another population's gene pool by a solitary male immigrant.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9609662     DOI: 10.1023/a:1009207600920

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chromosome Res        ISSN: 0967-3849            Impact factor:   5.239


  16 in total

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  13 in total

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9.  The first finding of chromosome variations in wild-born western hoolock gibbons.

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10.  Cytogenetic differentiation of two sympatric tree shrew taxa found in the southern part of the Isthmus of Kra.

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