Synaptonemal complex analysis of spermatocytes of Talpa occidentalis (Insectivora, Mammalia): autosomal synapsis and substaging of zygonema and pachynema

Cytogenet Cell Genet. 1990;53(2-3):97-102. doi: 10.1159/000132904.

Abstract

Spermatocytes from the mole, Talpa occidentalis, a species that includes both XX males and intersexes, were surface-spread and silver-stained to substage meiotic prophase from early zygonema through pachynema. In zygonema, only the Z2 and Z3 substages were found. This stage differed in comparison with such species as the Chinese hamster, laboratory mouse, and deer mouse, which belong to orders other than Insectivora. Pachynema, in which five substages were established (P1-P5), seems to be a more homogeneous stage, and remarkable differences with respect to the above-mentioned species were not found. Synaptic adjustment was demonstrated in X-Y pairing. Nonhomologous pairing was evident at the Y-centromeric region and considered likely in the proximal arm of this chromosome. In addition to sequencing the events taking place during zygonema and pachynema in males from a wild population in which some members show sex reversal, our finding represents the first attempt to substage zygonema and pachynema in an Insectivore species, thus contributing to current knowledge of the nature and degree of variability in the mammalian synaptic process.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cell Nucleus / ultrastructure
  • Eulipotyphla
  • Male
  • Meiosis*
  • Microscopy, Electron
  • Prophase
  • Spermatocytes / physiology*
  • Synaptonemal Complex*