The positions of centromeres on the somatic metaphase plate of grasses.

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Abstract

Centromere positions on the metaphase plate of 48 root-tip cells of four grass species were analysed using metaphases reconstructed from electron micrographs of serial thin sections. Centromere alignment was almost perfect on a plane in 15 untreated metaphases of cereals where 2n = 14; only 2% of the total variance in centromere position was out of the plane of the metaphase plate. In 23 similar cells pretreated with ice-water, the mean out-of-plate variance was 9%, compared to an expectation of 18% if centromeres were positioned randomly in space. In cold-treated cells of Zea mays (2n = 20), the out-of-plate variance (14%) was significantly less than a random expectation of 20%. The distances of centromeres from the mean centromere position (MCP) were also analysed. They showed that the centromeres tended to be normally distributed about a circle around the MCP in all the species. Thus centromeres tend towards a ring arrangement in metaphase cells. Analysis of separation distances of all pairs of centromeres in each reconstructed cell showed that the distribution of distances between centromeres is not random: there are significantly fewer centromeres that are close together and more that are at medium separation distances than is expected on a random basis. This is different from previously published assumptions about centromere disposition in squashed metaphases.

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APA

Heslop-Harrison, J. S., & Bennett, M. D. (1983). The positions of centromeres on the somatic metaphase plate of grasses. Journal of Cell Science, 64, 163–177. https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.64.1.163

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