Abstract
Chromosomal pairing of one triploid and three tetraploid plants of rye, Secale cereale, was analyzed by electron microscopy in surface-spread prophase I nuclei and compared with light microscopic observations of metaphase I cells. Prophase I is characterized by: (i) the weak alignment showed by the three or four unsynapsed or partially homologous synapsed axes; (ii) the low number ber of pairing partner switches (PPSs) displayed by both trivalents and quadrivalents; and (iii) the existence of complex multivalents in which up to 13 chromosomes in the triploid and 22 chromosomes in the tetraploids were involved. However, only few heterologous chromosomal associations were maintained at metaphase I. The results obtained are discussed under the assumptions of the random end pairing model with some modifications.
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Santos, J.L., Cuadrado, M.C., Díez, M. et al. Further insights on chromosomal pairing of autopolyploids: a triploid and tetraploids of rye. Chromosoma 104, 298–307 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00352261
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00352261