AI Article Synopsis

  • Males with chromosomal translocations were bred with normal females, resulting in embryos that were subjected to cytogenetic analysis after 16-18 hours of incubation.
  • Out of 62 embryos analyzed, 54 (7.8%) exhibited abnormal chromosomal configurations, indicating various levels of ploidy including haploid, diploid, triploid, and tetraploid forms.
  • The findings suggest that the diverse embryonic ploidy levels resulted from issues in meiotic division and fertilization processes, with specific markers indicating different genetic origins among the embryos.

Article Abstract

Males homozygous for chromosomal translocations were mated to karyologically normal females. The resulting embryos, after incubation for 16-18 h, were prepared for cytogenetic analysis. Of the 62 embryos analysed, 54 (7.8%) were heteroploid or contained a major heteroploid cell line. Each of the 638 normal 2n embryos contained one marker and one normal chromosome, indicating that none arose from gynogenesis. Thirteen homogeneous haploid embryos were identified; 24 embryos were chimaeric 1n/2n and one was 1n/3n. All haploid cell lines contained a marker chromosome indicating androgenetic origins. The 9 homogeneous triploid (3n) embryos and the 3n cell line in a single 1n/3n embryo contained a single marker. All resulted from fertilization by single spermatozoon of eggs that were diploid as a result of suppression of the second meiotic division. The 3n lines of two 2n/3n embryos were derived from other mechanisms. A single homogeneous tetraploid (4n) embryo and the 4n cell lines of three 2n/4n mosaic embryos each contained two marker chromosomes and presumable resulted from failure of cytokinesis in an early cleavage division.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/jrf.0.0520141DOI Listing

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