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Sexual dimorphism in mouse gametogenesis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 April 2009
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Diplotene and diakinesis chiasma frequency in oöcytes of the mouse cannot be studied successfully with the present technique. Metaphase chiasmata have been examined in thirty-nine oöcytes. It is deduced that the total diplotene map length in females is about 2300 cM. compared with 1950 cM. in males. There is sexual dimorphism in the frequency of chiasmata, which is paralleled by similar dimorphism in frequencies of crossing-over, measured genetically.
The two sexes differ in the duration of various stages of meiosis. In adult males the pachytene stage, lasting for about 7 days, is directly followed by diplotene and diakinesis, after which the metaphase stage sets in. The sex bivalent in males develops visible chiasmata much earlier than do the autosomes and it precedes them in anaphase separation. Quick terminalization of chiasmata in it leads in a fair proportion of cases to precocious separation and in less than 1% of cases to cytologically detectable non-disjunction of sex chromosomes.
In females the pachytene stage appears in oöcytes of the embryo and is followed by the dictyotene stage, which last still ovulation, i.e. between 35–40 days and several months. Since in the oöcyte chiasmata are formed and move during the dictyotene stage, it follows that stainable materials of the chromosomes are not necessary for the formation and movement of chiasmata and are concomitant with pairing and anaphase separation. It follows also that the time for chiasma formation and movement is in females at least five to six times longer than in males. In old oöcytes in which time is available for maximum terminalization of chiasmata, non-disjunction may appear with detectable frequency. This mechanism may also operate in cases of Mongolism in man, where non-disjunction of an autosome has been recently cytologically established and higher frequency of incidence of the condition for old mothers has been known for some time.
It is possible that the differences in duration of various stages of gametogenesis are connected with the period at which gametic selection is operating: in spermatogenesis after the second meiotic division, in oögenesis prior to first meiotic metaphase.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1960
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