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Chromosome

About: Chromosome is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 17538 publications have been published within this topic receiving 660077 citations. The topic is also known as: chromosomes & GO:0005694.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: By determining the number and distribution of crossovers in individual meiotic cells, this work demonstrated a surprisingly precise regulation of crossover number in each meiosis, considerably reduced recombination along chromosomes carrying ribosomal DNA arrays, and an inversely proportional relationship between recombination frequencies and chromosome size.
Abstract: During meiosis, crossover events generate new allelic combinations, yet the abundance of these genetic exchanges in individual cells has not been measured previously on a genomic level. To perform a genome-wide analysis of recombination, we monitored the assortment of genetic markers in meiotic tetrads from Arabidopsis. By determining the number and distribution of crossovers in individual meiotic cells, we demonstrated (i) surprisingly precise regulation of crossover number in each meiosis, (ii) considerably reduced recombination along chromosomes carrying ribosomal DNA arrays, and (iii) an inversely proportional relationship between recombination frequencies and chromosome size. This use of tetrad analysis also achieved precise mapping of all five Arabidopsis centromeres, localizing centromere functions in the intact chromosomes of a higher eukaryote.

182 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
20 Dec 2006-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: The results indicate that polyploidy might be more widespread in archaea (or even prokaryotes in general) than previously assumed, and the presence of so many genome copies in a proKaryote raises questions about the evolutionary significance of this strategy.
Abstract: Polyploidy is common in higher eukaryotes, especially in plants, but it is generally assumed that most prokaryotes contain a single copy of a circular chromosome and are therefore monoploid. We have used two independent methods to determine the genome copy number in halophilic archaea, 1) cell lysis in agarose blocks and Southern blot analysis, and 2) Real-Time quantitative PCR. Fast growing H. salinarum cells contain on average about 25 copies of the chromosome in exponential phase, and their ploidy is downregulated to 15 copies in early stationary phase. The chromosome copy number is identical in cultures with a twofold lower growth rate, in contrast to the results reported for several other prokaryotic species. Of three additional replicons of H. salinarum, two have a low copy number that is not growth-phase regulated, while one replicon even shows a higher degree of growth phase-dependent regulation than the main replicon. The genome copy number of H. volcanii is similarly high during exponential phase (on average 18 copies/cell), and it is also downregulated (to 10 copies) as the cells enter stationary phase. The variation of genome copy numbers in the population was addressed by fluorescence microscopy and by FACS analysis. These methods allowed us to verify the growth phase-dependent regulation of ploidy in H. salinarum, and they revealed that there is a wide variation in genome copy numbers in individual cells that is much larger in exponential than in stationary phase. Our results indicate that polyploidy might be more widespread in archaea (or even prokaryotes in general) than previously assumed. Moreover, the presence of so many genome copies in a prokaryote raises questions about the evolutionary significance of this strategy.

182 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 1989-Genomics
TL;DR: Through the use of a cDNA probe, the human erbB-2 gene was localized by in situ hybridization of normal human chromosomes at 17q11-q21.32 and this localization may facilitate the search for human malignancies with chromosome changes involving the erbBs gene.

181 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The most notable finding is that the V. cholerae chromosome appears to be not the single chromosome reported but two unique and separate circular megareplicons.
Abstract: Vibrio cholerae, the etiologic agent of the diarrheal disease cholera, is a Gram-negative bacterium that belongs to the γ subdivision of the family Proteobacteriaceae. The physical map of the genome has been reported, and the genome has been described as a single 3.2-Mb chromosome [Majumder, R., et al. (1996) J. Bacteriol. 178, 1105–1112]. By using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of genomic DNA immobilized in agarose plugs and digested with the restriction enzymes I-CeuI, SfiI, and NotI, we have also constructed the physical map of V. cholerae. Our analysis estimates the size of the genome at 4.0 Mb, 25% larger than the physical map reported by others. Our most notable finding is, however, that the V. cholerae chromosome appears to be not the single chromosome reported but two unique and separate circular megareplicons.

181 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Methylation of normally highly methylated satellite DNA sequences in these regions in Wilms tumors found to be frequent in juxtacentromeric (satellite 2) sequences and, especially, in centromeric sequences of chromosome 1.

181 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023862
20221,198
2021368
2020359
2019365