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      TRANSCRIPTION SITES IN SPREAD MEIOTIC PROPHASE CHROMOSOMES FROM MOUSE SPERMATOCYTES

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      The Journal of Cell Biology
      The Rockefeller University Press

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          Abstract

          Mouse spermatocytes at pachytene stage have been examined by whole-mount electron microscope techniques complemented with autoradiography as an approach for visualizing their transcriptive activity. Structural elements of meiotic bivalents, such as synaptonemal complexes and chromatin fibers, have been satisfactorily displayed in the total set of autosomal and sexual bivalents in single spermatocytes. Adequate preservation of the entire set of bivalents has provided a basis for recognition of sites where presumptive preribosomal RNA and heterogeneous nuclear RNA species are being transcribed at different segments of autosomal bivalents. Nucleoli attached to the basal knob region where nucleolar organizer cistrons are assumed to be located and ribonucleoprotein fibrils associated with distinct chromatin loops have been recognized. These structural findings have been correlated with display of [ 3H]uridine incorporation sites in thin-section and whole-mount electron microscopy autoradiographic preparations. A low transcriptive activity of the sexual bivalent contrasted with extensive gene expression in autosomal bivalents. Each sex chromosome shows a double axial core. A short region of pairing with a synaptonemal complex joins the two chromosomes at one end. We conclude that variations in the rate of RNA synthesis throughout meiotic prophase stages in the mouse are expressed as fluctuations in the amount and distribution of distinct RNA species at specific segments of the bivalents.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Cell Biol
          The Journal of Cell Biology
          The Rockefeller University Press
          0021-9525
          1540-8140
          1 December 1974
          : 63
          : 3
          : 923-935
          Affiliations
          From the Department of Anatomy and Laboratories for Reproductive Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27514, and the Department of Anatomy, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710.
          Author notes

          Dr Tres's present address is the Laboratories for Reproductive Biology, University of North Carolina.

          Article
          10.1083/jcb.63.3.923
          2109364
          4436386
          8ddc00fc-8289-4ae8-9cbf-c94a5e00d105
          Copyright © 1974 by The Rockefeller University Press
          History
          : 12 June 1974
          : 22 July 1974
          Categories
          Article

          Cell biology
          Cell biology

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