Abstract
In chicken oocytes, proteins of the K/J family or their analogs, such as are known to be involved in mRNA processing in humans, are closely associated with nascent C-rich RNA transcripts on the loops of lampbrush chromosomes. Using labelled single stranded nucleotide probes and an antibody to protein K, these C-rich transcripts have been mapped to six different pairs of lampbrush loops situated on 3 macrochromosomes, the sex bivalent (ZW) and certain microchromosomes. Each of these loop pairs has a distinctive morphology. The observations represent cytological evidence of the connection between K-proteins and C-rich RNA transcripts. Another structure, the spaghetti marker of macrochromosome II, also preferentially binds C-rich homonucleotides. This spaghetti marker has a highly distinctive fine structural organization that is quite unlike that of lampbrush loops. Its proteins are not recognised by antibodies to protein K. Homonucleotide binding loops are recommended as potentially extremely valuable as markers on physical maps of chicken chromosomes.
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