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Painting the chromosomes ofBrachypodium—current status and future prospects

✍ Scribed by Dominika Idziak; Alexander Betekhtin; Elzbieta Wolny; Karolina Lesniewska; Jonathan Wright; Melanie Febrer; Michael W. Bevan; Glyn Jenkins; Robert Hasterok


Publisher
Springer
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
834 KB
Volume
120
Category
Article
ISSN
0009-5915

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✦ Synopsis


Chromosome painting is one of the most powerful and spectacular tools of modern molecular cytogenetics, enabling complex analyses of nuclear genome structure and evolution. For many years, this technique was restricted to the study of mammalian chromosomes, as it failed to work in plant genomes due mainly to the presence of large amounts of repetitive DNA common to all the chromosomes of the complement. The availability of ordered, chromosome-specific BAC clones of Arabidopsis thaliana containing relatively little repetitive genomic DNA enabled the first chromosome painting in dicotyledonous plants. Here, we show for the first time chromosome painting in three different cytotypes of a monocotyledonous plant—the model grass, Brachypodium distachyon. Possible directions of further detailed studies are proposed, such as the evolution of grass karyotypes, the behaviour of meiotic chromosomes, and the analysis of chromosome distribution at interphase.


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