The fate of female donor blastodermal cells in male chimeric chickens

1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (10-11) ◽  
pp. 1218-1229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deborah L. Shaw ◽  
R. Stuart Carsience ◽  
Robert J. Etches ◽  
Ann M. Verrinder Gibbins

In previous experiments in our laboratories, chickens that are chimeric in their gamete, melanocyte, and blood cell populations have been produced by injection of dispersed stage X blastodermal donor cells into the subgerminal cavity of stage X recipient embryos. In some experiments, donor cells were transfected with reporter gene constructs prior to injection as a preliminary step in the production of transgenic birds. Chimerism was assessed by test mating, observation of plumage, and DNA fingerprinting. Methods were sought that would provide a relatively rapid analysis of the spatial distribution of descendants of donor cells in chimeras to assess the efficacy of various methods of chimera construction. To date, the sex of donor and recipient embryos was not known and, therefore, numerous mixed sex chimeras must have been constructed by chance, since donor cells were usually collected from several embryos rather than from individual embryos. The presence of female-derived cells was determined by in situ hybridization using a W-chromosome-specific DNA probe, using smears of washed erythrocytes from 16 phenotypically male chimeric chickens ranging in age from 4 days to 42 months posthatching. The proportion of female cells detected in the erythrocyte samples was zero (eight samples) or very low (0.020–0.083%), although 1% of the erythrocytes from a phenotypically male chick that was killed 4 days after hatch were female-derived. The low proportions of female-derived cells were surprising, considering that most of these chimeras had been produced by the injection of cells pooled from several donor embryos and most recipients had been exposed to γ irradiation prior to injection, thus dramatically enhancing the level of incorporation of donor cells into the resulting chimeras. By contrast, 0–100% of the erythrocytes were female-derived in blood samples taken at 10 days of incubation from the chorioallantois of seven phenotypically normal male embryos that resulted from the injection of blastodermal cells pooled from five embryos into irradiated recipient embryos. Approximately 70% of the erythrocytes in a blood sample from a phenotypically normal female chimeric embryo were female-derived, and 100% of the erythrocytes examined from an intersex embryo bearing a right testis and a left ovary were female-derived. These results indicate that female-derived cells can contribute to the formation of erythropoietic tissue during the early development of what will become a phenotypically male chimeric embryo. It would appear, therefore, that female-derived cells are blocked in development or destroyed, or certain male–female combinations of cells may be lethal prior to hatching. In future, chimeras will be produced from individual donors, or pools will be made of either male or female donor cells identified by in situ hybridization of smears of dispersed blastodermal cells using the W-chromosome-specific probe.Key words: chimera, chicken, W chromosome, in situ hybridization, transgenic.

Biologia ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 69 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marlon Pazian ◽  
Claudio Oliveira ◽  
Fausto Foresti

AbstractThe W chromosome of the fishes Characidium cf. fasciatum, Characidium sp. and Characidium cf. gomesi is heterochromatic, as is usually seen in most Characidium species. Samples of W-chromatin were collected by mechanical microdissection and amplified by DOP-PCR (degenerate oligonucleotide-primed polymerase chain reaction), to be used as painting probes (DCg and CgW) and for sequence analysis. FISH (fluorescence in situ hybridization) with DCg probe painted the whole W chromosome, the pericentromeric region of Z chromosomes and the terminal region of B chromosomes. DOP-PCR-generated fragments were cloned, sequenced and tested by in situ hybridization, but only CgW4 produced positive hybridization signals. Clone sequence analysis recovered seven distinct sequences, of which six did not reveal any similarity to other known sequences in the GenBank or GIRI databases. Only CgW9 clone sequence was recognized as probably derived from a Helitron-transposon similar to that found in the genome of the zebrafish Danio rerio. Our results show that the composition of Characidium’s W chromosome does seem rich in repetitive sequences as well as other W chromosomes found in several species with a ZW sex-determining mechanism.


Genome ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 156-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
István Molnár ◽  
Elena Benavente ◽  
Márta Molnár-Láng

The frequency and pattern of irradiation-induced intergenomic chromosome rearrangements were analysed in the mutagenized (M0) and the first selfed (M1) generations of Triticum aestivum  L. – Aegilops biuncialis Vis. amphiploids (2n = 70, AABBDDUbUbMbMb) by multicolour genomic in situ hybridization (mcGISH). mcGISH allowed the simultaneous discrimination of individual Ae. biuncialis genomes and wheat chromosomes. Dicentric chromosomes, fragments, and terminal translocations were most frequently induced by γ-irradiation, but centric fusions and internal exchanges were also more abundant in the treated plants than in control amphiploids. Rearrangements involving the Ub genome (Ub-type aberrations) were more frequent than those involving the Mb genome (Mb-type aberrations). This irradiation sensitivity of the Ub chromosomes was attributed to their centromeric or near-centromeric regions, since Ub-type centric fusions were significantly more abundant than Mb-type centric fusions at all irradiation doses. Dicentrics completely disappeared, but centric fusions and translocations were well transmitted from M0 to M1. Identification of specific chromosomes involved in some rearrangements was attempted by sequential fluorescence in situ hybridization with a mix of repeated DNA probes and GISH on the same slide. The irradiated amphiploids formed fewer seeds than untreated plants, but normal levels of fertility were recovered in their offspring. The irradiation-induced wheat – Ae. biuncialis intergenomic translocations will facilitate the successful introgression of drought tolerance and other alien traits into bread wheat.


2008 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cynthia C. Morton ◽  
Judith A. Brown ◽  
Ilan R. Kirsch ◽  
Glen A. Evans ◽  
Thalachallour Mohanakumar ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 15 (11) ◽  
pp. 1531-1535 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. H. Sohn ◽  
C. Y. Lee ◽  
E. K. Ryu ◽  
J. Y. Han ◽  
A. S. Multani ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Barbara Trask ◽  
Susan Allen ◽  
Anne Bergmann ◽  
Mari Christensen ◽  
Anne Fertitta ◽  
...  

Using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), the positions of DNA sequences can be discretely marked with a fluorescent spot. The efficiency of marking DNA sequences of the size cloned in cosmids is 90-95%, and the fluorescent spots produced after FISH are ≈0.3 μm in diameter. Sites of two sequences can be distinguished using two-color FISH. Different reporter molecules, such as biotin or digoxigenin, are incorporated into DNA sequence probes by nick translation. These reporter molecules are labeled after hybridization with different fluorochromes, e.g., FITC and Texas Red. The development of dual band pass filters (Chromatechnology) allows these fluorochromes to be photographed simultaneously without registration shift.


Author(s):  
Gary Bassell ◽  
Robert H. Singer

We have been investigating the spatial distribution of nucleic acids intracellularly using in situ hybridization. The use of non-isotopic nucleotide analogs incorporated into the DNA probe allows the detection of the probe at its site of hybridization within the cell. This approach therefore is compatible with the high resolution available by electron microscopy. Biotinated or digoxigenated probe can be detected by antibodies conjugated to colloidal gold. Because mRNA serves as a template for the probe fragments, the colloidal gold particles are detected as arrays which allow it to be unequivocally distinguished from background.


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