
doi: 10.1007/bf00328216
pmid: 3979177
Comparative fluorescence studies on the chromosome of ten species of acridid grasshoppers, with varying amounts and locations of C-band positive heterochromatin, indicate that the only regions to fluoresce differentially are those that C-band. Within a given species there is a marked tendency for groups of chromosomes to accumulate heterochromatin with similar fluorescence behaviour at similar sites. This applies to all three major categories of heterochromatin - centric, interstitial and telomeric. Different sites within the same complement, however, tend to have different fluorescence properties. In particular, centric C-bands within a given species are regularly distinguishable in their behaviour from telomeric C-bands. Different species on the other hand, may show distinct forms of differential fluorescence at equilocal sites. These varying patterns of heterochromatin heterogeneity, both within and between species, indicate that whatever determines the differential response to fluorochromes has tended to operate both on an equilocal basis and in a concerted fashion. This is reinforced by the fact that structural rearrangements that lead to the relocation of centric C-bands, either within or between species, may also be accompanied by a change in fluorescence behaviour.
Heterochromatin, Karyotyping, Animals, Grasshoppers, Chromosomes, Chromosome Banding
Heterochromatin, Karyotyping, Animals, Grasshoppers, Chromosomes, Chromosome Banding
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