Search results for "CHROMOSOME"

showing 10 items of 1175 documents

Sex chromosomes in vertebrates: XX/XY against ZZ/ZW.

2011

It was noted only recently that the mammalian X/Y sex chromosome system originated late in our therian ancestors. The question is, what makes the X/Y sex chromosome system so special that it has replaced the original Z/W sex chromosome system? Two classes of genes are overrepresented on the X chromosome: sex and reproduction genes and brain-related genes. The X chromosome has acquired bursts of young male-biased genes engaged in sex and reproduction which exemplifies the dynamics of sex chromosome evolution. Brain genes are old genes and display the most conserved transcriptome. The new therian X chromosome was formed by fusion of chromosome building blocks already bearing the highest densi…

GeneticsEmbryologyAutosomeX ChromosomebiologyEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismHaplotypeChromosomeVertebrateKaryotypeY chromosomeEvolution MolecularCognitionEvolutionary biologybiology.animalY ChromosomeVertebratesAnimalsGeneX chromosomeDevelopmental BiologySexual development : genetics, molecular biology, evolution, endocrinology, embryology, and pathology of sex determination and differentiation
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Genetic location and biochemical characterization of eye-colour mutants from natural populations of Drosophila melanogaster

1990

From six captures of Drosophila melanogaster carried out in three different habitats (cellar, vineyard, and pinewood) in two different seasons of the year (spring and autumn), 60 eye-colour mutations were isolated, which were reduced to 29 loci by means of allelism tests within and between populations. Forty-five of these mutations were analyzed genetically and biochemically; of these 33 turned out to be previously described mutants and mapped to a total of 17 loci. Twelve new mutants were discovered and they mapped to 12 new loci, distributed on chromosomes X, II, and III. The eye-colour mutants show large effects on the red and brown pigments. The high variability of the eye-colour loci …

GeneticsEye Colorgenetic structuresbiologyMutantChromosome MappingZoologyPigments BiologicalGeneral MedicineEyebiology.organism_classificationVineyardDrosophila melanogasterPhenotypeMutationGeneticsAnimalsDrosophila melanogasterMolecular BiologyAllelesBiotechnologyGenome
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Reciprocal translocation t(1;18)(p32;q21) in a patient with some phenotypical anomalies

1987

The authors report on a case of 1;18 translocation and request contact with any colleagues who have observed similar cases.

GeneticsEyelashesChromosomal translocationBiologyPhenotypeMolecular medicineTranslocation GeneticHuman geneticsPhenotypeChromosomes Human Pair 1GeneticsHumansFemaleEyebrowsMetabolic diseaseChildChromosomes Human Pair 16Genetics (clinical)Human Genetics
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Forensic validation of Y-chromosome STR polymorphisms in Italy: the GE.F.I. collaborative database

2003

Abstract Haplotype data of 1176 Italian males from 10 regions were obtained as a part of a collaborative validation exercise. Individual data are available at http://www.gefi-forensicDNA.it .

GeneticsForensic scienceGeographyHaplotypeIndividual dataGeneral MedicineY chromosomeInternational Congress Series
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Functional analysis of 12 ORFs fromSaccharomyces cerevisiae chromosome II

1999

Twelve different ORFs have been deleted from the right arm of Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosome II; namely YBR193c, YBR194w, YBR197c, YBR198c, YBR201w, YBR203w, YBR207w, YBR209w, YBR210w, YBR211c, YBR217w and YBR228w. Tetrad analysis of heterozygous deletant strains revealed that YBR193c, YBR198c and YBR211c are essential genes for vegetative growth. No effects were detected in any of the haploid deletion mutants for the rest of the ORFs with respect to growth, gross morphology or mating.

GeneticsFunctional analysisbiologySaccharomyces cerevisiaeChromosomeBioengineeringbiology.organism_classificationApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyBiochemistryGeneticsORFSPloidyTetradGeneFunctional genomicsBiotechnologyYeast
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Plasticity of human chromosome 3 during primate evolution.

2004

Comparative mapping of more than 100 region-specific clones from human chromosome 3 in Bornean and Sumatran orangutans, siamang gibbon, and Old and New World monkeys allowed us to reconstruct ancestral simian and hominoid chromosomes. A single paracentric inversion derives chromosome 1 of the Old World monkey Presbytis cristata from the simian ancestor. In the New World monkey Callithrix geoffroyi and siamang, the ancestor diverged on multiple chromosomes, through utilizing different breakpoints. One shared and two independent inversions derive Bornean orangutan 2 and human 3, implying that neither Bornean orangutans nor humans have conserved the ancestral chromosome form. The inversions, f…

GeneticsGene RearrangementLineage (genetic)ChromosomeChromosome MappingChromosome BreakageGene rearrangementHaplorhiniBiologySyntenyEvolution MolecularChromosome 3Evolutionary biologyGene DuplicationGeneticsAnimalsHumansChromosomes ArtificialChromosomes Human Pair 3Chromosome 21Chromosome 12PhylogenySyntenyChromosomal inversionGenomics
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Cytogenetic manifestations associated with the reversion, by gene amplification, at the HGPRT locus in V79 Chinese hamster cells.

1989

SummarySome HGPRT spontaneous revertants were isolated from a mutant line (E2) of V79 Chinese hamster cells and phenotypically characterized. Dot–Blot hybridization with a32P-Iabelled HGPRT probe revealed an increase in the number of HGPRT sequences in some of these revertants, suggesting the occurrence of gene amplification. Cytogenetic analysis performed in three of these revertants showed a characteristic abnormally banding region (ABR) on the elongated p arm of theXchromosome.In Situhybridization in one revertant (RHE2) showed that the amplified sequences reside on the p+arm of theXchromsome in two different localizations. Because of the very probable clonal origin of the revertant, the…

GeneticsGene Rearrangementmedicine.medical_specialtyHypoxanthine PhosphoribosyltransferaseCytogeneticsReversionGene AmplificationChromosomeHamsterKaryotypeGeneral MedicineGene rearrangementBiologybiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyChinese hamsterCell LineCricetinaeMutationGeneticsmedicineAnimalsX chromosomeGenetical research
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A simple sequence repeat-based linkage map of barley.

2000

Abstract A total of 568 new simple sequence repeat (SSR)-based markers for barley have been developed from a combination of database sequences and small insert genomic libraries enriched for a range of short simple sequence repeats. Analysis of the SSRs on 16 barley cultivars revealed variable levels of informativeness but no obvious correlation was found with SSR repeat length, motif type, or map position. Of the 568 SSRs developed, 242 were genetically mapped, 216 with 37 previously published SSRs in a single doubled-haploid population derived from the F1 of an interspecific cross between the cultivar Lina and Hordeum spontaneum Canada Park and 26 SSRs in two other mapping populations. A …

GeneticsGenetic Markerseducation.field_of_studyDNA PlantGenetic LinkagePopulationfood and beveragesChromosome MappingHordeumBiologyGenes Plantgenomic DNAGene mappingGenetic markerGenetic linkageGeneticsMicrosatelliteGenomic libraryRestriction fragment length polymorphismeducationCrosses GeneticGenome PlantResearch ArticleRepetitive Sequences Nucleic Acid
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Conserved synteny of mammalian imprinted genes in chicken, frog, and fish genomes

2006

Conservation of synteny of mammalian imprinted genes between chicken and human suggested that highly conserved gene clusters were selected long before these genes were recruited for genomic imprinting in mammals. Here we have applied in silico mapping of orthologous genes in pipid frog, zebrafish, spotted green and Japanese pufferfish to show considerable conservation of synteny in lower vertebrates. More than 400 million years ago in a common ancestor of teleost fish and tetrapods, ‘preimprinted’ chromosome regions homologous to human 6q25, 7q21, 7q32, 11p15, and 15q11→q12 already contained most present-day mammalian imprinted genes. Interestingly, some imprinted gene orthologues which are…

GeneticsGenomeBiologySyntenyGenomeChromosomesEvolution MolecularConserved SyntenyMultigene FamilyVertebratesGeneticsAnimalsHumansFish <Actinopterygii>Genomic imprintingMolecular BiologyGeneGenetics (clinical)SyntenyCytogenetic and Genome Research
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Localization of MRX82: A new nonsyndromic X-linked mental retardation locus to Xq24-q25 in a Basque family

2004

Clinical and molecular studies are reported on a Basque family (MRX82) with nonsyndromic X-linked mental retardation (XLMR) in five affected males. A total of 38 microsatellite markers were typed. The XLMR locus has been linked to DXS8067, DXS1001, DXS425, DXS7877, and DXS1183 with a maximum LOD score of 2.4. The haplotype studies and multipoint linkage analysis suggest a localization of the MRX82 locus to an interval of 7.6 Mb defined by markers DXS6805 and DXS7346, in Xq24 and Xq25, respectively. No gene contained in this interval has been so far associated with nonsyndromic mental retardation, except for GRIA3, disrupted by a balanced translocation in a female patient with bipolar affect…

GeneticsHaplotypeLocus (genetics)Biologymedicine.diseaseDevelopmental disorderGenetic linkageIntellectual disabilityGeneticsmedicinebiology.proteinMicrosatelliteGRIA3Genetics (clinical)X chromosomeAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
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