Abstract

Chromosomal axes of chicken oocytes from pre- and post-hatching chickens were analyzed with a microspreading technique for electron microscopy. At leptotene, chromosomal axes begin to be formed as discontinuous, non-polarized axial segments. During zygotene synaptonemal complex (SC) formation begins at the axial ends attached to the nuclear envelope. Polarization of axial ends is nearly simultaneous with the beginning of SC formation. The complete SC set is found at pachytene and it consists of 38 SC's and an unequal SC which has been identified as the ZW pair. This unequal SC is formed by two axes of different length. The Z and W axes represent 6.2% and 4.5% respectively of the combined length of the SC set plus the Z axis. The unpaired segment of the Z axis shortens markedly from early to mid-pachytene and becomes thicker than the lateral elements of SCs. In the paired region the Z axis forms most of the twists around a straighter W axis, suggesting some extent of non-homologous pairing between the Z and W chromosomes in this region. The existence of partial synapsis of the Z and W axes without heteropycnosis of the sex chromosomes is in marked contrast to partial synapsis in the heteropycnotic XY body of mammalian spermatocytes.

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