“…ZOO-FISH studies using human chromosome paints have been reported in such domestic animals as cattle (Hayes, 1995;Solinas-Toldo et al, 1995;Chowdhary et al, 1996), pig Rettenberger et al, 1995), horse (Raudsepp et al, 1996), and cat (O'Brien et al, 1997), but they are still lacking in other economically important domestic species, such as the river buffalo, where only a few loci have been physically mapped using both somatic cell hybrid (El Nahas et al, 1996;De Hondt et al, 1997) and in situ hybridization techniques (Hassaname et al, 1993(Hassaname et al, , 1994Iannuzzi et al, 1997a-d). Furthermore, the difficulty in clearly identifying small acrocentric chromosomes, especially when banding techniques are applied with contracted chromosome preparations, lends greater importance to the ZOO-FISH analysis in river buffalo (Bubalus bubalis, BBU) chromosomes owing to the presence of marker chromosome pairs involving small, disputed cattle (Bos taurus, BTA) chromosomes in the standardized nomenclatures (Iannuzzi, 1996).…”