- THIS ARTICLE
-
Abstract
- Full Text (PDF)
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me if a correction is posted
- SERVICES
- Email this article to a friend
- Similar articles in this journal
- Similar articles in PubMed
- Alert me to new issues of the journal
- Download to citation manager
- Reprints & Permissions
- CITING ARTICLES
- Citing Articles via HighWire
- Citing Articles via Google Scholar
- GOOGLE SCHOLAR
- Articles by Reugels, A. M.
- Articles by Bünemann, H.
- Search for Related Content
- PUBMED
- PubMed Citation
- Articles by Reugels, A. M.
- Articles by Bünemann, H.
Mega-introns in the Dynein Gene DhDhc7(Y) on the Heterochromatic Y Chromosome Give Rise to the Giant Threads Loops in Primary Spermatocytes of Drosophila hydei
Alexander M. Reugelsb, Roman Kurekc, Ulrich Lammermanna, and Hans Bünemannaa Institut für Genetik, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, D-40225 Düsseldorf, Germany,
b Institut für Entwicklungsbiologie, Universität zu Köln, D-50931 Köln, Germany
c Dipartimento di Genetica e Biologia Molecolare, Universita di Roma `La Sapienza', I-00185 Rome, Italy
Corresponding author: Hans Bünemann, Institut für Genetik, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Universitätsstr. 1, D-40225 Düsseldorf, Germany., bueneman{at}uni-duesseldorf.de (E-mail)
Communicating editor: S. HENIKOFF
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
The heterochromatic Y chromosomes of several Drosophila species harbor a small number of male fertility genes (fertility factors) with several unusual features. Expression of their megabase-sized loci is restricted to primary spermatocytes and correlates with the unfolding of species-specific lampbrush loop-like structures resulting from huge transcripts mainly derived from clusters of loop-specific Y chromosomal satellites. Otherwise, there is evidence from genetic mapping and biochemical experiments that at least two of these loops, Threads in Drosophila hydei and kl-5 in D. melanogaster, colocalize with the genes for the axonemal dynein ß heavy chain proteins DhDhc7(Y) and Dhc-Yh3, respectively. Here, we make use of particular Threads mutants with megabase-sized deletions for direct mapping of DhDhc7(Y)-specific exons among the large clusters of satellite DNA within the 5.1-Mb Threads transcription unit. PCR experiments with exon-specific primer pairs, in combination with hybridization experiments with exon- and satellite-specific probes on filters with large PFGE-generated DNA fragments, offer a simple solution for the long-lasting paradox between megabase-sized loops and protein-encoding transcription units; the lampbrush loops Threads and the DhDhc7(Y) gene are one and the same transcription unit, and the giant size of the DhDhc7(Y) gene as well as its appearance as a giant lampbrush loop are merely the result of transcription of huge clusters of satellite DNA within some of its 20 introns.
MEGABASE-sized clusters of tandemly repeated DNA sequences (satellites) are normally synonymous for regions of transcriptionally inactive heterochromatin. They are mostly concentrated within the centromeric and telomeric regions of chromosomes and are especially enriched in major parts of sex chromosomes. Satellite sequences from the Y chromosomes of Drosophila, however, seem to represent some of the rare exceptions to this general rule. In spite of their location on completely heterochromatic chromosomes (Figure 1A), most satellites on the Y of Drosophila are heavily transcribed in primary spermatocytes of male flies. Their transcription is remarkably restricted to areas of large lampbrush loop-like structures (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
|
Y chromosomal satellites were originally cloned during the course of screening for particular fertility gene probes (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
As an approach to understand these conflicting results, we concentrated our research on the so-called Threads loops of D. hydei (Th in Figure 1). The pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE)-mediated identification of well-separated, extended clusters of the three Threads-specific satellites YLII, YLI, and rally, in combination with two-color in situ transcript hybridization on several Threads deletion mutants, enabled us to construct a physical map for a putative Threads-specific transcription unit (![]()
![]()
5.1 Mb of satellite DNA. It is located within the subterminal region on the long arm of the Y chromosome and is transcribed toward the chromosomal end (indicated as an arrow in Figure 1A). We have also successfully applied the PCR technique for detecting, cloning, and sequencing the complete cDNA of the Y-chromosomal dynein ß heavy chain protein DhDhc7(Y) (![]()
|
To understand the Threads-specific colocalization of the YLII, YLI, and rally satellites, as well as that of the DhDhc7(Y) gene, as deduced from cytogenetic experiments (![]()
![]()
Although these results can explain conclusively the presence of an active protein-encoding gene within the Threads-specific transcription unit, they did not solve the long-lasting question concerning the link between the transcription of DhDhc7(Y) and transcription of a putative megabase-sized fertility gene associated with unfolding of the Threads loops. To address this problem, we used fertile Threads deletion mutants to study the extension of DhDhc7(Y)-specific introns in more detail. Our results of combined PFGE and PCR analyses clearly demonstrate the presence of several unusually large introns within the DhDhc7(Y) gene. One of them, intron 20, is especially huge and is composed mainly of megabase-sized clusters of the YLII, YLI, and rally satellites. In spite of its gigantic size of
3.6 Mb, intron 20 has to be fully transcribed to enable the transcription of the last small exon encoding 33 amino acids from the carboxy terminus of the DhDhc7(Y) protein to ensure motility of the sperm tails and fertility of the fly male. In summary, the paradox of a protein-encoding, megabase-sized Y chromosomal fertility gene in Drosophila can be solved by creating another paradox, namely that the largest transcription unit known so far exists on a heterochromatic chromosome that is generally believed to be transcriptionally inactive.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
D. hydei cell line and fly stocks:
The D. hydei cell line KUN-DH-33 (![]()
![]()
![]()
Fertility test of Thmut males:
The Thmut deletion has been generated by X-ray irradiation of the X·YPsTh translocation chromosome according to ![]()
Preparation of genomic DNA from D. hydei:
Genomic DNA for PCR analysis was prepared from adult flies essentially as described by ![]()
![]()
Cloning of additional genomic sequences from DhDhc7(Y) by PCR:
On the basis of the cDNA sequence of DhDhc7(Y) (![]()
Cloning of the missing exon-intron boundaries by supported PCR:
To reveal the complete exon-intron structure in the 5' region of the gene, we performed seven different supported PCR (![]()
![]()
Detection of DhDhc7(Y)- and DhDhc3-specific sequences in samples of genomic DNA:
To localize the 3' end of DhDhc7(Y) within the physical map of the lampbrush loop Threads on the Y chromosome of D. hydei, we used the following primer pairs of DhDhc7(Y)-specific sequences for PCR amplification on genomic DNA from D. hydei. The positions of the primers relative to the amino acid sequence are given in parentheses: Dh7E12-5' (aa 4041) 5'-GCACGCTGGCTGTCTAGCC-3' and Dh7E12-3' (aa 4285) 5'-AACCGCTAGACATACGAGG-3', Dh7-3I-5'C (129 nucleotides upstream from the 3' end of intron 20) 5'-CTTGAGTGCTCTCATTTCTTTC-3'and Dh7-3-3'B (116 nucleotides downstream from the stop codon) 5'-GAGTACTTAGTTATGTATAATGG-3'. Since major parts of the cDNA from the autosomal dynein heavy chain gene DhDhc3 used in control reactions are still unknown, the amino acid positions of the DhDhc3-specific primers are taken from the corresponding DhDhc7(Y) sequences by aligning the sequences of their putative protein products: Dh3E04A-5' (aa 522) 5'-CGATTGCCACAATCTAGAGAG-3' and Dh3E07A-3' (aa 679) 5'-GTTGAGGATCAACGAGTGTAC-3'.
Preparation and restriction digest of agarose inserts with high-molecular-weight DNA from KUN-DH-33 cells and nuclei of adult D. hydei flies:
Sedimented cells from the D. hydei cell line KUN-DH-33 (![]()
![]()
PFGE and Southern blot analysis:
Standard PFGE running conditions were 1% agarose, 0.25x TBE, 13°, 210 V, 22 hr, pulses log ramped from 100 to 20 s, and angles log ramped from 110 to 100°. All experiments were performed at the Rotaphore type IV R22 (Biometra). After staining with ethidium bromide and photography, gels were soaked successively in 0.25 M HCl, 1.5 M NaCl for 2x 10 min, 0.5 M NaOH for 2x 30 min, and 0.5 M Tris-HCl, 1.5 M NaCl, pH 7.0, for 2x 30 min. Finally, the gels were blotted on Hybond membranes according to standard protocols (![]()
In situ hybridization of specific probes for the repetitive sequences (GT)n, YLII and YLI on D. hydei testes:
Preparation of testes from adult D. hydei males was made essentially as described previously for the nuclei of primary spermatocytes (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Laser scanning microscopy:
Preparations from the in situ hybridizations were examined and photographed on the laser scanning microscope TCS/NT from Leica with an Acousto optical tunable filter.
| RESULTS |
|---|
The 20 introns of DhDhc7(Y) come in three different size classes:
As a first step toward understanding the distribution of DhDhc7(Y)-specific sequences among the satellite clusters within the Threads-specific transcription unit, we tried to complete identification and positioning of the gene-specific introns by analysis of additional genomic clones. In spite of numerous screens on several libraries of D. hydei DNA, which had identified positions and sequences of 16 putative introns, we had failed to close two remaining gaps within the 5' region of DhDhc7(Y) gene (![]()
![]()
![]()
Thmut males with an internal 3.6-Mb Threads deletion are fertile:
During the course of our PFGE experiments to physically map the three Threads-specifically transcribed clusters of YLII, YLI, and rally satellites, one fertile Threads mutant, Thmut, has been analyzed because of its peculiar loop morphology (Figure 1D). The most obvious difference was related to the position of the Pseudonucleolus (Ps). In contrast to the wild type (Figure 1B), the extended Threads-like structures Th, located between Ps and the NO, the nucleolar organizer at the base of the pear-shaped spermatocyte nucleus, seemed to be substantially reduced in size. PFGE analysis, in combination with two-color transcript FISH, revealed that this shortening of the Threads in Thmut was caused by a huge internal deletion comprising 3.6 Mb of YLII and YLI satellites, indicated as
in Figure 2B (![]()
|
Intron 20 of DhDhc7(Y) is gigantic because of megabase-sized clusters of satellite DNA:
Although a huge intron within the coding region of the Y chromosomal DhDhc7(Y) gene would provide an explanation for the megabase-size of the putative Threads-associated fertility gene, the results with Thmut could probably also result from the additional chromosomal rearrangements often observed in combination with large chromosomal deletions. Because we could not exclude such complex rearrangement during generation and maintenance of the Thmut mutation, we chose the PFGE approach to prove the presence of giant introns within the DhDhc7(Y) gene directly. To get complete digests of wild-type Y chromosomal DNA, we performed the PFGE experiments essentially on DNA of D. hydei KUN-DH-33 cells, which are especially well suited because of supernumerous copies of otherwise normal Y chromosomes (![]()
![]()
|
|
Although similar experiments were performed with several additional samples of unique DNA from the 5' half of the DhDhc7(Y) cDNA (probes 16 in Figure 4C), the lack of suitable intron-specific satellite probes prevented any clear demonstration of crosshybridization of exon- and satellite-specific probes with one and the same large DNA fragment. There is evidence, on the other hand, that especially the so-called Cones (Co in Figure 1) may result from strong transcription of (GT)n repeat clusters (![]()
![]()
400 kb from each other (not shown). As a result, other introns of unusual size and repetitive DNA content must exist within DhDhc7(Y), beside the especially large intron 20.
Direct visualization of sequential transcription of (GT)n, YLII, and YLI satellites in D. hydei testes:
Primary spermatocytes of Drosophila are generated from stem cells in the apical proliferative center of the adult testis by a series of cell divisions. As a primary gonial cell arises from the stem cell by division, a cyst progenitor also divides. By this process, each primary gonial cell and its progeny are enclosed by a pair of cyst cells throughout spermatogenesis (for a recent review see ![]()
|
Our model assumes that transcription on the Threads-specific transcription unit is directed from the Ps toward the NO (as shown by Figure 1A) and that the successive unfolding of the Threads loops is necessary to enable the generation of full-length 5.1-Mb transcripts. Under normal transcription rates, however, generation of 5.1-Mb transcripts requires 23 days (![]()
![]()
Although the overall organization of the DhDhc7(Y) transcription unit is well understood, precise localization of defined promoter and termination regions is presently impossible. Transcripts of Threads-specific sequences most probably start somewhere in the (GT)n-rich region of the Cones (Figure 1A). Whether Threads-specific, (GT)n-rich transcripts result from the Cones (![]()
![]()
![]()
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Our mega-intron model of the D. hydei fertility factor Threads interprets major parts of this lampbrush loop as nothing else but the transcription product of a gigantic intron that separates the exon encoding the last 33 amino acids at the carboxy terminus from the main body of the dynein ß heavy chain protein DhDhc7(Y) comprising a total of 4564 amino acids (![]()
![]()
This model is also supported by data on lampbrush loops that indicate that spectacular lampbrush loops are often associated with transcribed repetitive sequences (for a comprehensive review, see ![]()
100 kb in length (![]()
With these examples for RNP accumulation on transcripts of clustered repetitive sequences in mind, the Threads are looking exactly as spectacular as they should look, provided they were actively transcribed megabase-sized clusters of satellite DNA (Figure 1B and Figure C). According to the differences of their underlying repeats, YLII and YLI, the areas of corresponding RNP complexes appear as a diffuse matrix or as compact threads, respectively (Figure 6, AF).
Although cotranscription of repetitive DNA apparently seems to be rather common during the course of gene expression in premeiotic cells, the main peculiarity of Y chromosomal fertility genes, such as the Threads in D. hydei or kl-5 in D. melanogaster, derives from their gigantic size (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
2.3 Mb of genomic DNA and encoding 79 rather small exons for an mRNA of 14 kb (![]()
![]()
![]()
23-mm!-long spermatozoa of this fly species.
In spite of the fact that some uncommon features of the DhDhc7(Y) gene can be also observed for a small number of other more conventional genes, the accumulation of megabase-sized male fertility genes on the heterochromatic Y chromosomes of some Drosophila species is striking and probably due to two unique characteristics of this chromosome. (i) Recombination in the male germ line of Drosophila is absent or extremely rare. Also, sequences shared by the X and Y are restricted to clusters of rDNA and to some additional families of tandem repeats in D. melanogaster (![]()
![]()
Since the pioneering work of ![]()
-heterochromatin is defined as transcriptionally inactive chromatin most commonly restricted to centromere and telomere regions of chromosomes and detected by positive Giemsa staining. Such regions of
-heterochromatin are composed principally of megabase-sized clusters of a limited number of more or less pure satellites (![]()
![]()
![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank O. Hess for providing us with the fly stocks, M. Gatti, J. H. P. Hackstein and R. Hochstenbach for stimulating discussions, U. A. O. Heinlein for critical reading of the manuscript, and C. Gieseler for skillful technical assistence. This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Bu 342/4-6, 6-1).
Manuscript received July 6, 1999; Accepted for publication October 28, 1999.
| LITERATURE CITED |
|---|
AWGULEWITSCH, A. and H. BÜNEMANN, 1986 Isolation of Y-chromosomal repetitive DNA squences of D. hydei via enrichment of chromosome specific sequences by heterogeneous hybridization between female and male DNA. J. Biochem. Biophys. Methods 12:37-50[Medline].
BECK, H., 1976 New compound (1) chromosomes and the production of large quantities of X/O males in Drosophila hydei.. Genet. Res. 26:313-317.
BONACCORSI, S. and A. LOHE, 1991 Fine mapping of satellite DNA sequences along the Y chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster: relationships between satellite sequences and fertility factors. Genetics 129:177-189[Abstract].
BONACCORSI, S., S. PIMPINELLI, and M. GATTI, 1981 Cytological dissection of the sex chromosome heterochromatin in Drosophila hydei.. Chromosoma 84:391-403[Medline].
BONACCORSI, S., C. PISANO, F. PUOTI, and M. GATTI, 1988 Y chromosome loops in Drosophila melanogaster.. Genetics 120:1015-1034
CALLAN, H. G., 1986 Lampbrush Chromosomes. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.
DIAZ, M. O. and J. G. GALL, 1985 Giant readthrough transcription units at the histone loci on lampbrush chromosomes of the newt Notophthalmus.. Chromosoma 92:243-253[Medline].
FULLER, M., 1993 Spermatogenesis in Drosophila, pp. 71147 in The Development of Drosophila melanogaster, Vol. I, edited by M. BATE and A. M. ARIAS. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.
GATTI, M. and S. PIMPINELLI, 1983 Cytological and genetic analysis of the Y chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster. I. Organization of the fertility factors. Chromosoma 88:349-373.
GATTI, M. and S. PIMPINELLI, 1992 Functional elements in Drosophila melanogaster heterochromatin. Annu. Rev. Genet. 26:239-275[Medline].
GIBBONS, I. R., B. H. GIBBONS, G. MOCZ, and D. J. ASAI, 1991 Multiple nucleotide binding sites in the sequence of dynein ß heavy chain. Nature 352:640-643[Medline].
GLÄTZER, K. H., 1984 Preservation of nuclear RNP antigens in male germ cell development in D. hydei.. Mol. Gen. Genet. 196:236-243.
GOLDSTEIN, L. S. B., R. W. HARDY, and D. L. LINDSLEY, 1982 Structural genes in the Y chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster.. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 79:7405-7409
HACKSTEIN, J. H. P. and R. HOCHSTENBACH, 1995 The elusive fertility genes of Drosophila: the ultimate haven for selfish genetic elements. Trends Genet. 11:195-200[Medline].
HACKSTEIN, J. H. P., O. LEONCINI, H. BECK, G. PEELEN, and W. HENNIG, 1982 Genetic fine structure of the Y chromosome of Drosophila hydei.. Genetics 101:257-277
HARDY, R. W., K. T. TOKUYASU, and D. L. LINDSLEY, 1981 Analysis of spermatogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster bearing deletions for Y-chromosome fertility genes. Chromosoma 83:593-617[Medline].
HEITZ, E., 1928 Das Heterochromatin der Moose. Jahrb. Wiss. Botanik 69:762-818.
HENIKOFF, S., 1997 Nuclear organization and gene expression: homologous pairing and long-range interactions. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 9:388-395[Medline].
HENNIG, W., R. C. BRAND, J. H. P. HACKSTEIN, R. HOCHSTENBACH, and H. KREMER et al., 1989 Y chromosomal fertility genes of Drosophila: a new type of eukaryotic genes. Genome 31:561-571[Medline].
HESS, O., 1965 Strukturdifferenzierungen im Y-Chromosom von Drosophila hydei und ihre Beziehungen zu Genaktivitäten. I. Mutanten der Funktionsstrukturen. Verhandl. Deutsche Zool. Ges., Zool. Anz. 28(Suppl.):156-163.
HESS, O. and G. F. MEYER, 1968 Genetic activities of the Y chromosome in Drosophila during spermatogenesis. Adv. Genet. 14:171-223[Medline].
HUIJSER, P., W. HENNIG, and R. DIJKHOF, 1987 Poly(dC-dA/dG-dT) repeats in the Drosophila genome: a key function for dosage compensation and position effects? Chromosoma 95:209-215.
KARPEN, G. H., 1994 Position-effect variegation and the new biology of heterochromatin. Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev. 4:281-291[Medline].
KENNISON, J. A., 1981 The genetic and cytological organization of the Y chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster.. Genetics 98:529-548
KENNISON, J. A., 1983 Analysis of Y-linked mutations to male sterility in Drosophila melanogaster.. Genetics 103:219-234
KREMER, H., W. HENNIG, and R. DIJKHOF, 1986 Chromatin organization in the male germ line of Drosophila hydei.. Chromosoma 94:147-161.
KUREK, R., P. TRAPITZ, and H. BÜNEMANN, 1996 Strukturdifferenzierungen im Y-Chromosom von Drosophila hydei: the unique morphology of the Y chromosomal lampbrush loops Threads results from coaxial shells formed by different satellite-specific subregions within megabase-sized transcripts. Chromosome Res. 4:87-102[Medline].
KUREK, R., A. M. REUGELS, K. H. GLÄTZER, and H. BÜNEMANN, 1998 The Y chromosomal fertility factor Threads in Drosophila hydei harbors a functional gene encoding an axonemal dynein ß heavy chain protein. Genetics 149:1363-1376
LEMAIRE, M. F. and C. S. THUMMEL, 1990 Splicing precedes polyadenylation during Drosophila E74A transcription. Mol. Cell. Biol. 10:6059-6063
LIFSCHYTZ, E., 1979 A procedure for the cloning and identification of Y-specific middle repetitive sequences in D. hydei.. J. Mol. Biol. 133:267-277[Medline].
LIFSCHYTZ, E., D. HAREVEN, A. AZRIEL, and H. BRODSLEY, 1983 DNA clones and RNA transcripts of four lampbrush loops from the Y chromosome of Drosophila hydei.. Cell 32:191-192[Medline].
MIKLOS, G. L. G., 1985 Localized highly repetitive DNA sequences in vertebrate and invertebrate genomes, pp. 241321 in Molecular Evolutionary Genetics., edited by R. J. MACINTYRE. Plenum Press, New York.
MOUNT, S. M., C. BURKS, H. HERTZ, G. D. STORMO, and O. WHITE et al., 1992 Splicing signals in Drosophila: intron size, information content, and consensus sequences. Nucleic Acids Res. 20:4255-4262
PITNICK, S., T. MARKOW, and G. S. SPICER, 1995 Delayed male maturity is a cost of producing large sperm in Drosophila. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92:10614-10618
RASMUSSON, K., M. SERR, J. GEPNER, I. GIBBONS, and T. H. HAYS, 1994 A family of dynein genes in Drosophila melanogaster.. Mol. Biol. Cell 5:45-55[Abstract].
RUDENKO, G. N., C. M. T. ROMMENS, H. J. J. NIJKAMP, and J. HILLE, 1993 Supported PCR: an efficient procedure to amplify sequence flanking a known DNA segment. Plant Mol. Biol. 21:723-728[Medline].
SAKAKIBARA, H., S. TAKADA, S. M. KING, G. B. WITMAN, and R. KAMIYA, 1993 A Chlamydomonas outer arm dynein mutant with a truncated ß heavy chain. J. Cell Biol. 122:653-661
SAMBROOK, J., E. F. FRITSCH and T. MANIATIS, 1989 Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.
SCOTT, M. P., A. J. WEINER, T. I. HAZELRIGG, B. A. POLISKY, and V. PIROTTA et al., 1983 The molecular organization of the Antennapedia locus of Drosophila.. Cell 35:763-776[Medline].
SHIELD, G. and J. H. SANG, 1977 Improved medium for culture of Drosophila embryonic cells. Dros. Info. Serv. 52:161.
SONDERMEIJER, P. J. A., J. W. M. DERKSEN, and N. H. LUBSEN, 1980 Established cell lines of Drosophila hydei.. In Vitro 16:913-914[Medline].
STEINEMANN, M. and S. STEINEMANN, 1998 Enigma of Y chromosome degeneration: Neo-Y and Neo-X chromosomes of Drosophila miranda a model for sex chromosome evolution. Genetica 102(103):409-420.
TENNYSON, C. N., H. J. KLAMUT, and R. G. WORTON, 1995 The human dystrophin gene requires 16 hours to be transcribed and is cotranscriptionally spliced. Nature Genet. 9:184-190[Medline].
TRAPITZ, P. and H. BÜNEMANN, 1992 Preparation of high molecular weight DNA from Drosophila adults for PFGE analysis. Trends Genet 8:371-372[Medline].
TRAPITZ, P., M. WLASCHEK, and H. BÜNEMANN, 1988 Structure and function of Y chromosomal DNA. II. Analysis of lampbrush loop associated transcripts in nuclei of primary spermatocytes of Drosophila hydei by in situ hybridization. Chromosoma 96:159-170[Medline].
TRAPITZ, P., K. H. GLÄTZER, and H. BÜNEMANN, 1992 Towards a physical map of the fertility genes on the heterochromatic Y chromosome of Drosophila hydei: families of repetitive sequences transcribed on the lampbrush loops Nooses and Threads are organized in extended clusters of several hundred kilobases. Mol. Gen. Genet. 235:221-234[Medline].
VARLEY, J. M., H. C. MACGREGOR, and H. P. ERBA, 1980 Satellite DNA is transcribed on lampbrush chromosomes. Nature 283:686-688[Medline].
VOGT, P. and W. HENNIG, 1983 Y chromosomal DNA of D. hydei.. J. Mol. Biol. 167:37-56[Medline].
WLASCHEK, M., A. AWGULEWITSCH, and H. BÜNEMANN, 1988 Structure and function of Y chromosomal DNA. I. Sequence organization and localization of four families of repetitive DNA on the Y chromosome of Drosophila hydei. Chromosoma 96:145-158[Medline].
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
C. D. Smith, S. Shu, C. J. Mungall, and G. H. Karpen The Release 5.1 Annotation of Drosophila melanogaster Heterochromatin Science, June 15, 2007; 316(5831): 1586 - 1591. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J. M. Burnette, E. Miyamoto-Sato, M. A. Schaub, J. Conklin, and A. J. Lopez Subdivision of Large Introns in Drosophila by Recursive Splicing at Nonexonic Elements Genetics, June 1, 2005; 170(2): 661 - 674. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C. Bartolome, X. Maside, and B. Charlesworth On the Abundance and Distribution of Transposable Elements in the Genome of Drosophila melanogaster Mol. Biol. Evol., June 1, 2002; 19(6): 926 - 937. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. A. Jensen, B. Charlesworth, and M. Kreitman Patterns of Genetic Variation at a Chromosome 4 Locus of Drosophila melanogaster and D. simulans Genetics, February 1, 2002; 160(2): 493 - 507. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. B. Carvalho, B. A. Dobo, M. D. Vibranovski, and A. G. Clark Identification of five new genes on the Y chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster PNAS, October 25, 2001; (2001) 231484998. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. B. Carvalho, B. P. Lazzaro, and A. G. Clark Y chromosomal fertility factors kl-2 and kl-3 of Drosophila melanogaster encode dynein heavy chain polypeptides PNAS, November 2, 2000; (2000) 230438397. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
![]() |
A. B. Carvalho, B. P. Lazzaro, and A. G. Clark Y chromosomal fertility factors kl-2 and kl-3 of Drosophila melanogaster encode dynein heavy chain polypeptides PNAS, November 21, 2000; 97(24): 13239 - 13244. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. B. Carvalho, B. A. Dobo, M. D. Vibranovski, and A. G. Clark Identification of five new genes on the Y chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster PNAS, November 6, 2001; 98(23): 13225 - 13230. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
- THIS ARTICLE
-
Abstract
- Full Text (PDF)
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me if a correction is posted
- SERVICES
- Email this article to a friend
- Similar articles in this journal
- Similar articles in PubMed
- Alert me to new issues of the journal
- Download to citation manager
- Reprints & Permissions
- CITING ARTICLES
- Citing Articles via HighWire
- Citing Articles via Google Scholar
- GOOGLE SCHOLAR
- Articles by Reugels, A. M.
- Articles by Bünemann, H.
- Search for Related Content
- PUBMED
- PubMed Citation
- Articles by Reugels, A. M.
- Articles by Bünemann, H.





DNA, and 1-kb ladder (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD). (BF) Autoradiographs of the same filter after successive hybridizations with labeled probes for DhDhc7(Y) exon 19 (B), exon 21 (C), and the Threads-specific satellites rally (D), YLII (E), and YLI (F). Arrowheads indicate fragments that cohybridize with exon- and satellite-specific probes. It is evident that exon 19 (probe 7 in 



