Utilisateur
Because chromosomes are fully condensed and separated, making them easiest to see and count.
Cells are burst (dropped) onto a slide so nuclei break open and chromosomes spread out, then detection reagents (stains) are added.
Chemicals with a natural affinity for all DNA that have a visible colour (seen with regular light microscopy).
All DNA, making mitotic chromosomes visible as dark-coloured structures.
A molecule that binds all DNA and glows a specific colour under fluorescent light.
All DNA, and it fluoresces blue, allowing all chromosomes to be visualized.
A piece of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) attached to a fluorescent dye that binds a specific DNA sequence by base pairing
Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization — using fluorescent DNA probes to detect specific DNA sequences in chromosomes
Telomere DNA (TTAGGG)n, which was labeled red by a hybridization probe.
Specific chromatin proteins, not DNA.
An antibody that binds a target chromatin protein is covalently linked to a fluorescent dye, lighting up where that protein is located.
MSL3 chromatin proteins using fluorescent antibodies.
Drosophila have 4 chromosome pairs:
X/Y (sex chromosomes), 2, 3, and 4.
Blue = heterochromatin (satellite DNA)
• Yellow = euchromatin (gene-rich DNA)
• C = centromere
• NO = nucleolar organizer (rRNA genes)
It contains repetitive satellite DNA, is gene-poor, and clusters together in polytene chromosomes.
Telocentric — the centromere is near one end of the chromosome.
Salivary gland cells of Drosophila larvae.
Repeated DNA replication without mitosis, while sister chromatids remain stuck together.
Sister chromatids stick together
Homologous chromosomes stick together
All heterochromatin sticks together → chromocentre
The central mass where all heterochromatin from all chromosomes sticks together.
Euchromatin, which contains most of the genes.
It contains two homologs × two sister chromatids × replicated many times bundled into one structure.
They contain hundreds to thousands of DNA copies aligned side-by-side, making them visible under a light microscope.
No — males have a Y chromosome, but it does not form polytene arms, so both sexes have the same number of arms.
Dark bands = compact chromatin
• Light interbands = open, transcriptionally active chromatin
Orcein, a coloured DNA stain that makes bands darker.
A map showing gene order based on crossing-over frequency, invented by Alfred Sturtevant.
At 1–1.5 map units on the X chromosome.
A map based on visible chromosome bands, created by Calvin Bridges using polytene chromosomes.
At 3B6 on the X chromosome.
A map based on exact base-pair positions in the genome (completed in 2000).
At X: 2,684,632 base pairs.
