Summary
Analysis of reconstructions, prepared from electron micrographs of successive longitudinal serial sections, has led to the conclusion that the somatic telophase chromosome of Tradescantia paludosa contains four cytologically separable chromonemata. The four represent a pair of pairs, that is, two diplospiremes — one with its two chromonemata arranged helically in dextrorse relationship, and the other with its two in sinistrorse relationship — which are associated to form a tetraspireme. During anaphase and telophase the tetraspireme constitutes the chromosome; during prophase and metaphase the tetraspireme represents one of the two chromatids of the chromosome, which is accordingly an octospireme in terms of the number of cytologically identifiable chromonemata. Loose intertwining of the two tetraspiremes during late prophase accounts for the so-called relational coiling.
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This paper is dedicated to Professor Hans Bauer on his sixtieth birthday anniversary in appreciation of his contributions to the development of modern cytology.
The work reported here was supported in part by Research Grants GM-10499 from the National Institutes of Health, U.S. Public Health Service, and GB-290 from the National Science Foundation, and in part by a NATO fellowship awarded to E. Sparvoli by the Italian National Council of Research.
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Sparvoli, E., Gay, H. & Kaufmann, B.P. Number and pattern of association of chromonemata in the chromosomes of Tradescantia . Chromosoma 16, 415–435 (1965). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00343171
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00343171