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Defining the ancestral karyotype of all primates by multidirectional chromosome painting between tree shrews, lemurs and humans

  1. Author:
    Muller, S.
    Stanyon, R.
    O'Brien, P. C. M.
    Ferguson-Smith, M. A.
    Plesker, R.
    Wienberg, J.
  2. Author Address

    Wienberg J Univ Munich, Inst Anthropol & Human Genet D-8000 Munich Germany Univ Munich, Inst Anthropol & Human Genet D-8000 Munich Germany Univ Cambridge, Dept Pathol Cambridge CB2 1QP England NCI, Lab Gen Divers Frederick, MD 21702 USA Paul Ehrlich Inst Frankfurt Germany
    1. Year: 1999
  1. Journal: Chromosoma
    1. 108
    2. 6
    3. Pages: 393-400
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    We used multidirectional chromosome painting with probes derived by bivariate flourescence-activated flow sol ting of chromosomes from human, black lemur (Eulemur macaco macaco) and tree shrew (Tupaia belangeri, order Scandentia) to better define the karyological relationship of tree shrews and primates. An assumed close relationship between tree shrews and primates also assists in the reconstruction of the ancestral primate karyotype taking the tree shrew as an "out-group" species. The results indicate that T. belangeri has a highly derived karyotype. Tandem fusions or fissions of chromosomal segments seem to be the predominant mechanism in the evolution of this tree shrew karyotype. The 22 human autosomal painting probes delineated 40 different segments, which is in the range found in most mammals analyzed by chromosome painting up to now. There were no reciprocal translocations that would distinguish the karyotype of the tree shrew from an assumed primitive primate karyotype. This karyotype would have included the chromosomal forms la, Ib, 2a, 2b, 3/21, 4-11, 12a/22a, 12b/22b, 13, 14/15, 16a, 16b, 17, 18, 19a, 19b, 20 and X and Y and had a diploid chromosome number of 2n = 50. Of these forms, chromosomes la, Ib, 4, 8, 12a/22a, and 12b/22b may be common derived characters that would link the tree shrew with primates. To define the exact phylogenetic relationships of the tree shrews and the genomic rearrangements that gave rise to the primates and eventually to humans further chromosome painting in Rodentia, Lagomorpha, Dermoptera and Chiroptera is needed, but many of the landmarks of genomic evolution are now known. [References: 35]

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