
In the asexual all-female fish species Poecilia formosa, the Amazon molly, supernumerary chromosomes have frequently been found in both laboratory-reared and wild-caught individuals. While wild-caught individuals with B chromosomes are phenotypically indifferent from conspecifics, individuals carrying B chromosomes from recent introgression events in the laboratory show phenotypic changes. Former analyses showed that the expression of a pigment cell locus is associated with the presence of these B chromosomes. In addition, they contain a so far unidentified locus that confers a higher susceptibility to tumor formation in the presence of pigmentation pattern. Isolation by microdissection and hybridization to metaphase chromosomes revealed that they contain one or several sequences with similarity to a highly repetitive pericentromeric and subtelomeric sequence in A chromosomes. Isolation of one particular sequence by AFLP showed that the B chromosomes contain at least 1 copy of an A-chromosomal region which is highly conserved in the whole genus Poecilia, i.e. more than 5 million years old. We propose it to be a single copy sequence.
Male, ddc:610, Poecilia, Base Sequence, Genotype, Karyotype, Molecular Sequence Data, Parthenogenesis, Melanophores, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Fibroblasts, DNA Fingerprinting, Chromosomes, Phenotype, Genetic Loci, Neoplasms, Animals, Female, Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis, Cells, Cultured, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence
Male, ddc:610, Poecilia, Base Sequence, Genotype, Karyotype, Molecular Sequence Data, Parthenogenesis, Melanophores, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Fibroblasts, DNA Fingerprinting, Chromosomes, Phenotype, Genetic Loci, Neoplasms, Animals, Female, Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis, Cells, Cultured, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence
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