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Karyology of parthenogenetic weevils (Coleoptera, Curculionidae): do meiotic prophase stages occur?

Abstract
We investigated the cytological mechanism of parthenogenesis by analyzing the chromosomes in five weevil species. All examined species are polyploids, four of which: Otiorhynchus ovatus, Simo variegates, Cathormiocerus aristatus, and Tropiphorus elevatus possess three haploid sets of chromosomes (3n=33), whereas the fifth, Trachyphloeus parallelus, is tetraploid with 44 chromosomes (4n=44). The plates contained 27-31 chromosomes in triploid species and 38, 39, 41 and even 44 in tetraploid T. parallelus. In all species single clusters of metaphase plates with a haploid number of n=11 were visible. Some oogonial cells showed nuclei configurations resembling the stages of diplotene and diakinesis. The spiralized chromosomes in these nuclei may have been connected by chiasmata resulting in rods figures and ring-shaped bivalents. Occurrence of the remnants of meiosis could suggest some degree of recombination in parthenogenetic lineages of weevils.
AuthorsMaria Rozek, Dorota Lachowska, Milada Holecovà, Łukasz Kajtoch
JournalMicron (Oxford, England : 1993) (Micron) Vol. 40 Issue 8 Pg. 881-5 (Dec 2009) ISSN: 1878-4291 [Electronic] England
PMID19595603 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Topics
  • Animals
  • Chromosomes (metabolism, ultrastructure)
  • Karyotyping
  • Meiosis
  • Parthenogenesis
  • Prophase
  • Weevils (cytology, physiology)

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