Abstract

Chromosome pairing and chiasma frequency were studied in meiocytes at diakinesis of Lilium speciosum cv. “Rosemede” fixed up to 21 days after the start of either continuous or 3 day pulse colchicine treatment. The two treatments gave similar results. In pulse treated pollen mother cells (PMCs) the mean chiasma frequency per cell fell from 26.4 in controls to 8.5 after fourteen days while the mean number of univalents per cell increased from 0.05 to 17.58. There was a negative correlation between mean chiasma frequency per bivalent and per PMC in colchicine treated buds; univalents were preferentially induced in bivalents with one chiasma, and preferentially excluded in bivalents with 4 chiasmata. Some chiasmata were redistributed to surviving bivalents despite the concurrent reduction in chiasma frequency per meiocyte. — Colchicine sensitivity began in premeiotic interphase and extended to mid or late zygotene in PMCs; ongoing synapsis was unaffected. However, susceptibility to univalency was asynchronous between bivalents occurring at zygotene in short chromosomes but at late premeiotic interphase in the longest chromosomes. The number of chiasmata per bivalent could be altered by colchicine without inducing univalents, but the ultimate effect was to reduce the number of chiasmata per bivalent (or per chromosome arm) directly to zero. The major factors determining the order and extent of reduced pairing and chiasma number were total chromosome length and arm length. Pairing and chiasma formation in embryo sac mother cells were less sensitive to colchicine than in PMCs, but their behavior was otherwise similar.

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