Abstract

A Giemsa banding technique has been used to study C-banding in mitotic chromosomes in root tips of Fritillaria graeca, F. crassifolia and F. rhodocanakis, all diploids (2n=24) belonging to the graeca group. In the first two the C-bands were of two types, diverging in respect of staining regularly and specifically within chromosomes. In one type it was weak, being intermediate between that of intensely stained ones, representing the other class, and the euchromatin. In F. graeca the pale bands were proximally localized and confined to 5 pairs, whereas in F. crassifolia they occurred only in the 4 M chromosomes, in each within the centromeric constriction as a large inclusion. The interphase nuclei of both species contained pale and heavily stained chromocentres. No pale ones occurred in such nuclei of F. rhodocanakis. The probability is discussed that the two classes of C-band represent distinct types of heterochromatin, differing both in respect of condensation throughout the whole mitotic cycle and in the repetitive DNA sequences they most likely contain. In all 3 species pairs of Giemsa-positive centromeric dots, representing the centromeres, were masked both by proximally or centromerically localized bands, irrespective of the class of heterochromatin they represented.

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