Login / Signup

Identification of sex chromosomes in Eremiasvelox (Lacertidae, Reptilia) using lampbrush chromosome analysis.

Artem P LisachovSvetlana A GalkinaAlsu F Saifitdinovanull Svetlana A RomanenkoDaria A AndreyushkovaVladimir A TrifonovPavel M Borodin
Published in: Comparative cytogenetics (2019)
Reptiles are good objects for studying the evolution of sex determination, since they have different sex determination systems in different lineages. Lacertid lizards have been long-known for possessing ZZ/ZW type sex chromosomes. However, due to morphological uniformity of lacertid chromosomes, the Z chromosome has been only putatively cytologically identified. We used lampbrush chromosome (LBC) analysis and FISH with a W-specific probe in Eremiasvelox (Pallas, 1771) to unequivocally identify the ZW bivalent and investigate its meiotic behavior. The heterochromatic W chromosome is decondensed at the lampbrush stage, indicating active transcription, contrast with the highly condensed condition of the lampbrush W chromosomes in birds. We identified the Z chromosome by its chiasmatic association with the W chromosome as chromosome XIII of the 19 chromosomes in the LBC karyotype. Our findings agree with previous genetic and genomic studies, which suggested that the lacertid Z chromosome should be one of the smaller macrochromosomes.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • gene expression
  • computed tomography
  • mass spectrometry
  • solid phase extraction
  • single molecule
  • contrast enhanced
  • living cells