
doi: 10.1038/43815
pmid: 10517628
The red viscacha rat is unaffected by having double the usual number of chromosomes. Polyploidy, or having more than a pair of each type of chromosome, is considered to be unlikely in mammals because it would disrupt the mechanism of dosage compensation that normally inactivates one X chromosome in females1. Also, any imbalance in chromosome number should affect the normal developmental processes and therefore constitute an evolutionary end, as in triploid humans2.
Male, X Chromosome, Biological Evolution, Chromosome Banding, Muridae, Polyploidy, Karyotyping, Y Chromosome, Animals, Sperm Head, Female, Cell Size
Male, X Chromosome, Biological Evolution, Chromosome Banding, Muridae, Polyploidy, Karyotyping, Y Chromosome, Animals, Sperm Head, Female, Cell Size
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