Abstract
Pachytene synaptonemal complexes and recombination nodules were analysed, by surface spreading, in the closely related species Allium fistulosum and Allium cepa (both 2n = 16), which show highly contrasting patterns of chiasma distribution. Pachytene observations show that all eight pairs of homologues are fully paired in both species, despite the pronounced localisation of chiasmata in A. fistulosum. Synaptonemal complex karyotype analysis reveals similar marker complexes in both species. These are presumed homoeologues, which, possibly due to the uneven distribution of the higher DNA amount found in A. cepa, rank in slightly different positions in the two karyotypes. Darkly staining ellipsoidal late recombination nodules were observed associated with PTA stained pachytene synaptonemal complexes. The positional distribution of late recombination nodules along synaptonemal complexes corresponds almost exactly to the distribution of chiasmata along metaphase I bivalents in the two species. These observations strongly support the proposal that late recombination nodules are involved in reciprocal meiotic recombination. The frequencies of late recombination nodules at pachytene showed deficits (30% in A. fistulosum, 70% in A. cepa) compared to metaphase I chiasma frequencies. It is suggested that the greater deficit of late recombination nodules in A. fistulosum could be related to a longer duration of meiosis in this species resulting from its greater genomic DNA content.Key words: synaptonemal complex, recombination nodules, Allium.
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