The Barr body is a looped X chromosome formed by telomere association.
- 15 July 1991
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 88 (14), 6191-6195
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.14.6191
Abstract
We examined Barr bodies formed by isodicentric human X chromosomes in cultured human cells and in mouse-human hybrids using confocal microscopy and DNA probes for centromere and subtelomere regions. At interphase, the two ends of these chromosomes are only a micron apart, indicating that these inactive X chromosomes are in a nonlinear configuration. Additional studies of normal X chromosomes reveal the same telomere association for the inactive X but not for the active X chromosome. This nonlinear configuration is maintained during mitosis and in a murine environment.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- A unified model of eukaryotic chromosomesCytometry, 1990
- Molecular cytological differentiation of active from inactive X domains in interphase: implications for X chromosome inactivationCytogenetic and Genome Research, 1989
- Delineation of individual human chromosomes in metaphase and interphase cells by in situ suppression hybridization using recombinant DNA librariesHuman Genetics, 1988
- The relative intranuclear positions of barr bodies in XXX non-transformed human fibroblastsExperimental Cell Research, 1986
- Two subsets of human alphoid repetitive DNA show distinct preferential localization in the pericentric regions of chromosomes 13, 18, and 21Cytogenetic and Genome Research, 1986
- Hypervariable telomeric sequences from the human sex chromosomes are pseudoautosomalNature, 1985
- Molecular cloning of a cDNA encoding human antihaemophilic factorNature, 1984
- High-resolution mapping of satellite DNA using biotin-labeled DNA probes.The Journal of cell biology, 1982
- Absence of somatic pairing of sex chromatin masses (inactivated X chromosomes) in cultured cells from a human XXXXY maleExperimental Cell Research, 1967
- Non-Random Distribution of Chromosomes in Metaphase Figures from Cultured Human Leucocytes I. The Peripheral Location of the Y ChromosomeCytogenetic and Genome Research, 1963