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NUCLEOLUS ORGANIZERS IN MUS MUSCULUS SUBSPECIES AND IN THE RAG MOUSE CELL LINE
Author(s) -
V.G. Dev,
Ramana Tantravahi,
D.A. Miller,
O. J. Miller
Publication year - 1977
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/86.2.389
Subject(s) - biology , nucleolus , ploidy , secondary constriction , nucleolus organizer region , silver stain , differential staining , microbiology and biotechnology , chromosome , genetics , stain , inbred strain , staining , karyotype , x chromosome , subspecies , gene , cytoplasm , zoology
Silver staining has been used to detect active nucleolus organizer regions (NOR's). By this criterion six mouse chromosomes, numbers 12, 15, 16, 17, 18 and 19, can have an NOR. The number and distribution of chromosomes with NOR's vary among inbred strains of Mus musculus musculus (C57BL/6J, BALB/cJ, C3H/HeJ and C3H/StCr1BR) and in M. musculus molossinus. In a musculus x molossinus F1 hybrid, nucleolus organizers from each parent are silver stained.—Chromosomes which have NOR's in diploid cells also show them in tetraploid cells and in established cell lines. The BALB/cJ strain shows Ag-staining of NOR's on chromosomes 12, 15, 18 and occasionally 16. In the RAG cell line, which was derived from BALB/c, active NOR's are seen on 12, 15 and 18, even after these chromosomes have undergone structural rearrangements in the cell line. Some correlation exists between the amount of Ag-stain and the size of a secondary construction region, with a large amount of Ag-stain present on a chromosome which has a prominent secondary constriction. There is no correlation between the amount of Ag-stain and the presence or absence of C-band material.

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