Diploid homo- and heterokaryotypes of barley translocation lines with only one satellite chromosome pair containing two nucleolus organizer regions (NORs) in opposite arms were found to show repressed nucleolus formation by the transposed NOR as evident from the formation of only micronucleoli. The same was true for auto-tetraploid homokaryotypes and for translocation lines with all NORs tandemly arranged into the same chromosome arm. When NORs were transposed to chromosomes without NOR in the standard karyotype, the normal pattern of nucleolus formation remained unaffected. The modified mode of nucleolus formation after the combination of all NORs in one chromosome pair is interpreted to be due to intrachromosomal nucleolar dominance analogous to interchromosomal nucleolar dominance observed in certain interspecific hybrids.
A mean frequency of 20.6 sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) per cell has been observed in a reconstructed karyotype of Hordeum vulgare by application of the FPG technique after unifilar incorporation of BrdU into chromosomes. The involvement in SCEs of the 48 segments into which the chromosome set had been subdivided was, with a single deviation, length proportional and independent of the segment's heterochromatin content. Asymmetric bands, indicative of an uneven distribution of adenine and thymidine between the DNA strands in adenine (A)-thymidine (T) rich chromosome regions, could not be detected after incubation of the cells in BrdU for one cycle of DNA replication.
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