The synaptonemal complex karyotype from spread spermatocytes of a dipteran (Aedes aegypti)
Synaptonemal complexes (SCs) from the spermatocytes of the mosquito, Aedes aegypti, were spread on a 0.3 M sucrose hypophase and analyzed in the electron microscope. The SC karyotype was similar to the one known from light microscopy of mitotic cells in both relative lengths and in centromere positions. All pachytene nuclei retained their bouquet configuration during spreading; the telomeres were polarized and clustered, and the three centromeric regions were close together. The kinetochores differentiated during pachytene, those of bivalent No. 1 (the sex bivalent) before the others. Recombination nodules were preserved in some spreads; out of 35 nodules, whose distal or proximal location on the SC arms could be determined, 27 were located in the distal one-third of the arms. No SC arm had more than one nodule.