53 results on '"María Teresa Parra"'
Search Results
2. Meiosis reveals the early steps in the evolution of a neo-XY sex chromosome pair in the African pygmy mouse Mus minutoides.
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Ana Gil-Fernández, Paul A Saunders, Marta Martín-Ruiz, Marta Ribagorda, Pablo López-Jiménez, Daniel L Jeffries, María Teresa Parra, Alberto Viera, Julio S Rufas, Nicolas Perrin, Frederic Veyrunes, and Jesús Page
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Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Sex chromosomes of eutherian mammals are highly different in size and gene content, and share only a small region of homology (pseudoautosomal region, PAR). They are thought to have evolved through an addition-attrition cycle involving the addition of autosomal segments to sex chromosomes and their subsequent differentiation. The events that drive this process are difficult to investigate because sex chromosomes in almost all mammals are at a very advanced stage of differentiation. Here, we have taken advantage of a recent translocation of an autosome to both sex chromosomes in the African pygmy mouse Mus minutoides, which has restored a large segment of homology (neo-PAR). By studying meiotic sex chromosome behavior and identifying fully sex-linked genetic markers in the neo-PAR, we demonstrate that this region shows unequivocal signs of early sex-differentiation. First, synapsis and resolution of DNA damage intermediates are delayed in the neo-PAR during meiosis. Second, recombination is suppressed or largely reduced in a large portion of the neo-PAR. However, the inactivation process that characterizes sex chromosomes during meiosis does not extend to this region. Finally, the sex chromosomes show a dual mechanism of association at metaphase-I that involves the formation of a chiasma in the neo-PAR and the preservation of an ancestral achiasmate mode of association in the non-homologous segments. We show that the study of meiosis is crucial to apprehend the onset of sex chromosome differentiation, as it introduces structural and functional constrains to sex chromosome evolution. Synapsis and DNA repair dynamics are the first processes affected in the incipient differentiation of X and Y chromosomes, and they may be involved in accelerating their evolution. This provides one of the very first reports of early steps in neo-sex chromosome differentiation in mammals, and for the first time a cellular framework for the addition-attrition model of sex chromosome evolution.
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- 2020
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3. Epigenetic Dysregulation of Mammalian Male Meiosis Caused by Interference of Recombination and Synapsis
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Roberto de la Fuente, Florencia Pratto, Abrahan Hernández-Hernández, Marcia Manterola, Pablo López-Jiménez, Rocío Gómez, Alberto Viera, María Teresa Parra, Anna Kouznetsova, R. Daniel Camerini-Otero, and Jesús Page
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meiosis ,epigenetics ,histone modifications ,synapsis ,recombination ,Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
Meiosis involves a series of specific chromosome events, namely homologous synapsis, recombination, and segregation. Disruption of either recombination or synapsis in mammals results in the interruption of meiosis progression during the first meiotic prophase. This is usually accompanied by a defective transcriptional inactivation of the X and Y chromosomes, which triggers a meiosis breakdown in many mutant models. However, epigenetic changes and transcriptional regulation are also expected to affect autosomes. In this work, we studied the dynamics of epigenetic markers related to chromatin silencing, transcriptional regulation, and meiotic sex chromosome inactivation throughout meiosis in knockout mice for genes encoding for recombination proteins SPO11, DMC1, HOP2 and MLH1, and the synaptonemal complex proteins SYCP1 and SYCP3. These models are defective in recombination and/or synapsis and promote apoptosis at different stages of progression. Our results indicate that impairment of recombination and synapsis alter the dynamics and localization pattern of epigenetic marks, as well as the transcriptional regulation of both autosomes and sex chromosomes throughout prophase-I progression. We also observed that the morphological progression of spermatocytes throughout meiosis and the dynamics of epigenetic marks are processes that can be desynchronized upon synapsis or recombination alteration. Moreover, we detected an overlap of early and late epigenetic signatures in most mutants, indicating that the normal epigenetic transitions are disrupted. This can alter the transcriptional shift that occurs in spermatocytes in mid prophase-I and suggest that the epigenetic regulation of sex chromosomes, but also of autosomes, is an important factor in the impairment of meiosis progression in mammals.
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- 2021
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4. Transition from a meiotic to a somatic-like DNA damage response during the pachytene stage in mouse meiosis.
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Andrea Enguita-Marruedo, Marta Martín-Ruiz, Eva García, Ana Gil-Fernández, María Teresa Parra, Alberto Viera, Julio S Rufas, and Jesús Page
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Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Homologous recombination (HR) is the principal mechanism of DNA repair acting during meiosis and is fundamental for the segregation of chromosomes and the increase of genetic diversity. Nevertheless, non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) mechanisms can also act during meiosis, mainly in response to exogenously-induced DNA damage in late stages of first meiotic prophase. In order to better understand the relationship between these two repair pathways, we studied the response to DNA damage during male mouse meiosis after gamma radiation. We clearly discerned two types of responses immediately after treatment. From leptotene to early pachytene, exogenous damage triggered the massive presence of γH2AX throughout the nucleus, which was associated with DNA repair mediated by HR components (DMC1 and RAD51). This early pathway finished with the sequential removal of DMC1 and RAD51 and was no longer inducible at mid pachytene. However, from mid-pachytene to diplotene, γH2AX appeared as large discrete foci. This late repair pattern was mediated initially by NHEJ, involving Ku70 and XRCC4, which were constitutively present, and 53BP1, which appeared at sites of damage soon after irradiation. Nevertheless, 24 hours after irradiation, a HR pathway involving RAD51 but not DMC1 mostly replaced NHEJ. Additionally, we observed the occurrence of synaptonemal complex bridges between bivalents, most likely representing chromosome translocation events that may involve DMC1, RAD51 or 53BP1. Our results reinforce the idea that the early "meiotic" repair pathway that acts by default at the beginning of meiosis is replaced from mid-pachytene onwards by a "somatic-like" repair pattern. This shift might be important to resolve DNA damage (either endogenous or exogenous) that could not be repaired by the early meiotic mechanisms, for instance those in the sex chromosomes, which lack a homologous chromosome to repair with. This transition represents another layer of functional changes that occur in meiotic cells during mid pachytene, in addition to epigenetic reprograming, reactivation of transcription, changes in the gene expression profile and acquisition of competence to proceed to metaphase.
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- 2019
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5. A high incidence of meiotic silencing of unsynapsed chromatin is not associated with substantial pachytene loss in heterozygous male mice carrying multiple simple robertsonian translocations.
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Marcia Manterola, Jesús Page, Chiara Vasco, Soledad Berríos, María Teresa Parra, Alberto Viera, Julio S Rufas, Maurizio Zuccotti, Silvia Garagna, and Raúl Fernández-Donoso
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Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Meiosis is a complex type of cell division that involves homologous chromosome pairing, synapsis, recombination, and segregation. When any of these processes is altered, cellular checkpoints arrest meiosis progression and induce cell elimination. Meiotic impairment is particularly frequent in organisms bearing chromosomal translocations. When chromosomal translocations appear in heterozygosis, the chromosomes involved may not correctly complete synapsis, recombination, and/or segregation, thus promoting the activation of checkpoints that lead to the death of the meiocytes. In mammals and other organisms, the unsynapsed chromosomal regions are subject to a process called meiotic silencing of unsynapsed chromatin (MSUC). Different degrees of asynapsis could contribute to disturb the normal loading of MSUC proteins, interfering with autosome and sex chromosome gene expression and triggering a massive pachytene cell death. We report that in mice that are heterozygous for eight multiple simple Robertsonian translocations, most pachytene spermatocytes bear trivalents with unsynapsed regions that incorporate, in a stage-dependent manner, proteins involved in MSUC (e.g., gammaH2AX, ATR, ubiquitinated-H2A, SUMO-1, and XMR). These spermatocytes have a correct MSUC response and are not eliminated during pachytene and most of them proceed into diplotene. However, we found a high incidence of apoptotic spermatocytes at the metaphase stage. These results suggest that in Robertsonian heterozygous mice synapsis defects on most pachytene cells do not trigger a prophase-I checkpoint. Instead, meiotic impairment seems to mainly rely on the action of a checkpoint acting at the metaphase stage. We propose that a low stringency of the pachytene checkpoint could help to increase the chances that spermatocytes with synaptic defects will complete meiotic divisions and differentiate into viable gametes. This scenario, despite a reduction of fertility, allows the spreading of Robertsonian translocations, explaining the multitude of natural Robertsonian populations described in the mouse.
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- 2009
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6. Sequential assembly of centromeric proteins in male mouse meiosis.
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María Teresa Parra, Rocío Gómez, Alberto Viera, Elena Llano, Alberto M Pendás, Julio S Rufas, and José A Suja
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Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
The assembly of the mitotic centromere has been extensively studied in recent years, revealing the sequence and regulation of protein loading to this chromosome domain. However, few studies have analyzed centromere assembly during mammalian meiosis. This study specifically targets this approach on mouse spermatocytes. We have found that during prophase I, the proteins of the chromosomal passenger complex Borealin, INCENP, and Aurora-B load sequentially to the inner centromere before Shugoshin 2 and MCAK. The last proteins to be assembled are the outer kinetochore proteins BubR1 and CENP-E. All these proteins are not detected at the centromere during anaphase/telophase I and are then reloaded during interkinesis. The loading sequence of the analyzed proteins is similar during prophase I and interkinesis. These findings demonstrate that the interkinesis stage, regularly overlooked, is essential for centromere and kinetochore maturation and reorganization previous to the second meiotic division. We also demonstrate that Shugoshin 2 is necessary for the loading of MCAK at the inner centromere, but is dispensable for the loading of the outer kinetochore proteins BubR1 and CENP-E.
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- 2009
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7. Meiotic pairing and segregation of achiasmate sex chromosomes in eutherian mammals: the role of SYCP3 protein.
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Roberto de la Fuente, María Teresa Parra, Alberto Viera, Adela Calvente, Rocío Gómez, José Angel Suja, Julio S Rufas, and Jesús Page
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Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
In most eutherian mammals, sex chromosomes synapse and recombine during male meiosis in a small region called pseudoautosomal region. However in some species sex chromosomes do not synapse, and how these chromosomes manage to ensure their proper segregation is under discussion. Here we present a study of the meiotic structure and behavior of sex chromosomes in one of these species, the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus). We have analyzed the location of synaptonemal complex (SC) proteins SYCP1 and SYCP3, as well as three proteins involved in the process of meiotic recombination (RAD51, MLH1, and gamma-H2AX). Our results show that although X and Y chromosomes are associated at pachytene and form a sex body, their axial elements (AEs) do not contact, and they never assemble a SC central element. Furthermore, MLH1 is not detected on the AEs of the sex chromosomes, indicating the absence of reciprocal recombination. At diplotene the organization of sex chromosomes changes strikingly, their AEs associate end to end, and SYCP3 forms an intricate network that occupies the Y chromosome and the distal region of the X chromosome long arm. Both the association of sex chromosomes and the SYCP3 structure are maintained until metaphase I. In anaphase I sex chromosomes migrate to opposite poles, but SYCP3 filaments connecting both chromosomes are observed. Hence, one can assume that SYCP3 modifications detected from diplotene onwards are correlated with the maintenance of sex chromosome association. These results demonstrate that some components of the SC may participate in the segregation of achiasmate sex chromosomes in eutherian mammals.
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- 2007
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8. Sequential loading of cohesin subunits during the first meiotic prophase of grasshoppers.
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Ana M Valdeolmillos, Alberto Viera, Jesús Page, Ignacio Prieto, Juan L Santos, María Teresa Parra, Margarete M S Heck, Carlos Martínez-A, José L Barbero, José A Suja, and Julio S Rufas
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Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
The cohesin complexes play a key role in chromosome segregation during both mitosis and meiosis. They establish sister chromatid cohesion between duplicating DNA molecules during S-phase, but they also have an important role during postreplicative double-strand break repair in mitosis, as well as during recombination between homologous chromosomes in meiosis. An additional function in meiosis is related to the sister kinetochore cohesion, so they can be pulled by microtubules to the same pole at anaphase I. Data about the dynamics of cohesin subunits during meiosis are scarce; therefore, it is of great interest to characterize how the formation of the cohesin complexes is achieved in order to understand the roles of the different subunits within them. We have investigated the spatio-temporal distribution of three different cohesin subunits in prophase I grasshopper spermatocytes. We found that structural maintenance of chromosome protein 3 (SMC3) appears as early as preleptotene, and its localization resembles the location of the unsynapsed axial elements, whereas radiation-sensitive mutant 21 (RAD21) (sister chromatid cohesion protein 1, SCC1) and stromal antigen protein 1 (SA1) (sister chromatid cohesion protein 3, SCC3) are not visualized until zygotene, since they are located in the synapsed regions of the bivalents. During pachytene, the distribution of the three cohesin subunits is very similar and all appear along the trajectories of the lateral elements of the autosomal synaptonemal complexes. However, whereas SMC3 also appears over the single and unsynapsed X chromosome, RAD21 and SA1 do not. We conclude that the loading of SMC3 and the non-SMC subunits, RAD21 and SA1, occurs in different steps throughout prophase I grasshopper meiosis. These results strongly suggest the participation of SMC3 in the initial cohesin axis formation as early as preleptotene, thus contributing to sister chromatid cohesion, with a later association of both RAD21 and SA1 subunits at zygotene to reinforce and stabilize the bivalent structure. Therefore, we speculate that more than one cohesin complex participates in the sister chromatid cohesion at prophase I.
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- 2007
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9. Involvement of synaptonemal complex proteins in sex chromosome segregation during marsupial male meiosis.
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Jesús Page, Alberto Viera, María Teresa Parra, Roberto de la Fuente, José Angel Suja, Ignacio Prieto, José Luis Barbero, Julio S Rufas, Soledad Berríos, and Raúl Fernández-Donoso
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Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Marsupial sex chromosomes break the rule that recombination during first meiotic prophase is necessary to ensure reductional segregation during first meiotic division. It is widely accepted that in marsupials X and Y chromosomes do not share homologous regions, and during male first meiotic prophase the synaptonemal complex is absent between them. Although these sex chromosomes do not recombine, they segregate reductionally in anaphase I. We have investigated the nature of sex chromosome association in spermatocytes of the marsupial Thylamys elegans, in order to discern the mechanisms involved in ensuring their proper segregation. We focused on the localization of the axial/lateral element protein SCP3 and the cohesin subunit STAG3. Our results show that X and Y chromosomes never appear as univalents in metaphase I, but they remain associated until they orientate and segregate to opposite poles. However, they must not be tied by a chiasma since their separation precedes the release of the sister chromatid cohesion. Instead, we show they are associated by the dense plate, a SCP3-rich structure that is organized during the first meiotic prophase and that is still present at metaphase I. Surprisingly, the dense plate incorporates SCP1, the main protein of the central element of the synaptonemal complex, from diplotene until telophase I. Once sex chromosomes are under spindle tension, they move to opposite poles losing contact with the dense plate and undergoing early segregation. Thus, the segregation of the achiasmatic T. elegans sex chromosomes seems to be ensured by the presence in metaphase I of a synaptonemal complex-derived structure. This feature, unique among vertebrates, indicates that synaptonemal complex elements may play a role in chromosome segregation.
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- 2006
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10. A perikinetochoric ring defined by MCAK and Aurora-B as a novel centromere domain.
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María Teresa Parra, Rocío Gómez, Alberto Viera, Jesús Page, Adela Calvente, Linda Wordeman, Julio S Rufas, and José A Suja
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Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Mitotic Centromere-Associated Kinesin (MCAK) is a member of the kinesin-13 subfamily of kinesin-related proteins. In mitosis, this microtubule-depolymerising kinesin seems to be implicated in chromosome segregation and in the correction of improper kinetochore-microtubule interactions, and its activity is regulated by the Aurora-B kinase. However, there are no published data on its behaviour and function during mammalian meiosis. We have analysed by immunofluorescence in squashed mouse spermatocytes, the distribution and possible function of MCAK, together with Aurora-B, during both meiotic divisions. Our results demonstrate that MCAK and Aurora-B colocalise at the inner domain of metaphase I centromeres. Thus, MCAK shows a "cone"-like three-dimensional distribution beneath and surrounding the closely associated sister kinetochores. During the second meiotic division, MCAK and Aurora-B also colocalise at the inner centromere domain as a band that joins sister kinetochores, but only during prometaphase II in unattached chromosomes. During chromosome congression to the metaphase II plate, MCAK relocalises and appears as a ring below each sister kinetochore. Aurora-B also relocalises to appear as a ring surrounding and beneath kinetochores but during late metaphase II. Our results demonstrate that the redistribution of MCAK at prometaphase II/metaphase II centromeres depends on tension across the centromere and/or on the interaction of microtubules with kinetochores. We propose that the perikinetochoric rings of MCAK and Aurora-B define a novel transient centromere domain at least in mouse chromosomes during meiosis. We discuss the possible functions of MCAK at the inner centromere domain and at the perikinetochoric ring during both meiotic divisions.
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- 2006
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11. An ancient testis-specific IQ motif-containing H gene regulates specific transcript isoform expression during spermatogenesis
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Paula Navarrete-López, Marta Lombó, Maria Maroto, Eva Pericuesta, Raúl Fernández-González, Priscila Ramos-Ibeas, María Teresa Parra, Alberto Viera, José Ángel Suja, Alfonso Gutiérrez-Adán, Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), Lombó, Marta, Maroto, Maria, Fernández-González, Raúl, Ramos-Ibeas, Priscila, Parra, María Teresa, Viera, Alberto, Suja, José Ángel, and Gutiérrez-Adán, Alfonso
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Iqch ,Splicing regulation ,Transcript variants ,lncRNAs ,Spermatogenesis ,Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development ,Molecular Biology ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
16 Pág., Spermatogenic cells express more alternatively spliced RNAs than most whole tissues; however, the regulation of these events remains unclear. Here, we have characterized the function of a testis-specific IQ motif-containing H gene (Iqch) using a mutant mouse model. We found that Iqch is essential for the specific expression of RNA isoforms during spermatogenesis. Using immunohistochemistry of the testis, we noted that Iqch was expressed mainly in the nucleus of spermatocyte and spermatid, where IQCH appeared juxtaposed with SRRM2 and ERSP1 in the nuclear speckles, suggesting that interactions among these proteins regulate alternative splicing (AS). Using RNA-seq, we found that mutant Iqch produces alterations in gene expression, including the clear downregulation of testis-specific lncRNAs and protein-coding genes at the spermatid stage, and AS modifications - principally increased intron retention - resulting in complete male infertility. Interestingly, we identified previously unreported spliced transcripts in the wild-type testis, while mutant Iqch modified the expression and use of hundreds of RNA isoforms, favouring the expression of the canonical form. This suggests that Iqch is part of a splicing control mechanism, which is essential in germ cell biology., This study was funded by the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación/Agencia Estatal de Investigación (PID2021-122507OB-I00 and PID2020-117491GB-I00) and the European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR. P.N.-L. was supported by a pre-doctoral fellowship from the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (PRE2019-088813) and M.L. was supported by a Juan de la Cierva postdoctoral contract (FJC2019-040385-I) from the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación. Open access funding provided by Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientıficas. Deposited in PMC for immediate release.
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- 2023
12. X chromosome inactivation during grasshopper spermatogenesis
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Jesús Page, Juan Luis Santos, Sara Arévalo, Alberto Viera, María Teresa Parra, Carlos Vega, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
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Male ,X Chromosome ,RNA polymerase II ,Grasshoppers ,Biology ,QH426-470 ,X-inactivation ,Article ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,Histones ,Prophase ,Meiosis ,Eyprepocnemis plorans ,Spermatocytes ,X Chromosome Inactivation ,Y Chromosome ,Genetics ,Animals ,Gene Silencing ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Spermatogenesis ,Genetics (clinical) ,X chromosome ,transcriptional activity ,Autosome ,MSCI ,sex chromosomes ,Lysine ,Synapsis ,Biología y Biomedicina / Biología ,Cell biology ,Chromosome Pairing ,biology.protein ,grasshopper ,Female ,RNA Polymerase II ,meiosis - Abstract
Regulation of transcriptional activity during meiosis depends on the interrelated processes of recombination and synapsis. In eutherian mammal spermatocytes, transcription levels change during prophase-I, being low at the onset of meiosis but highly increased from pachytene up to the end of diplotene. However, X and Y chromosomes, which usually present unsynapsed regions throughout prophase-I in male meiosis, undergo a specific pattern of transcriptional inactivation. The interdependence of synapsis and transcription has mainly been studied in mammals, basically in mouse, but our knowledge in other unrelated phylogenetically species is more limited. To gain new insights on this issue, here we analyzed the relationship between synapsis and transcription in spermatocytes of the grasshopper Eyprepocnemis plorans. Autosomal chromosomes of this species achieve complete synapsis; however, the single X sex chromosome remains always unsynapsed and behaves as a univalent. We studied transcription in meiosis by immunolabeling with RNA polymerase II phosphorylated at serine 2 and found that whereas autosomes are active from leptotene up to diakinesis, the X chromosome is inactive throughout meiosis. This inactivation is accompanied by the accumulation of, at least, two repressive epigenetic modifications: H3 methylated at lysine 9 and H2AX phosphorylated at serine 139. Furthermore, we identified that X chromosome inactivation occurs in premeiotic spermatogonia. Overall, our results indicate: (i) transcription regulation in E. plorans spermatogenesis differs from the canonical pattern found in mammals and (ii) X chromosome inactivation is likely preceded by a process of heterochromatinization before the initiation of meiosis.
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- 2021
13. Meiotic Behavior of Achiasmate Sex Chromosomes in the African Pygmy Mouse Mus mattheyi Offers New Insights into the Evolution of Sex Chromosome Pairing and Segregation in Mammals
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Ana Gil-Fernández, Marta Martín-Ruiz, Frédéric Veyrunes, Alberto Viera, Tamara Laguna, María Teresa Parra, Rocío Gómez, Pablo López-Jiménez, Marta Ribagorda, Jesús Page, Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier (UMR ISEM), École pratique des hautes études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université de Montpellier (UM)-Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] : UR226, UAM. Departamento de Biología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (UAM), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université de Montpellier (UM)-Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] : UR226-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), This research was funded by Grant CGL2014-53106-P from Ministerio de Economía yCompetitividad (Spain), French National Research Agency (ANR grant SEXREV 18-CE02-0018-01),Del Duca Foundation from the Institut de France ('subvention scientifique'). A.G.-F. was supportedby a predoctoral fellowship from the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Spain) and theEuropean Social Fund (European Commission). M.R. was supported by a postgraduate grant fromDepartamento de Biología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (Spain)., and ANR-18-CE02-0018,SEXREV,Ménage à trois: un troisième chromosome sexuel féminisant. Conséquences évolutives et implications pour la génétique du déterminisme du sexe chez les mammifères(2018)
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Male ,pygmy mouse ,Pseudoautosomal region ,Mus mattheyi ,QH426-470 ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Chromosome Segregation ,meiosis ,MESH: Animals ,MESH: Chromosome Segregation / genetics ,MESH: Evolution, Molecular ,Genetics (clinical) ,Mammals ,0303 health sciences ,Sex Chromosomes ,Synapsis ,MESH: Karyotype ,MESH: Chromosome Pairing / genetics ,Biología y Biomedicina / Biología ,Meiosis ,Female ,Karyotype ,Biology ,Y chromosome ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,evolution ,Genetics ,Animals ,MESH: Mice ,Metaphase ,030304 developmental biology ,MESH: Sex Chromosomes / physiology ,Autosome ,sex chromosomes ,Chromosome ,[SDV.BDLR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Reproductive Biology ,MESH: Meiosis / genetics ,MESH: Mammals / genetics ,MESH: Male ,Synaptonemal complex assembly ,Chromosome Pairing ,MESH: Karyotyping ,Evolutionary biology ,Karyotyping ,MESH: Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
International audience; X and Y chromosomes in mammals are different in size and gene content due to an evolutionary process of differentiation and degeneration of the Y chromosome. Nevertheless, these chromosomes usually share a small region of homology, the pseudoautosomal region (PAR), which allows them to perform a partial synapsis and undergo reciprocal recombination during meiosis, which ensures their segregation. However, in some mammalian species the PAR has been lost, which challenges the pairing and segregation of sex chromosomes in meiosis. The African pygmy mouse Mus mattheyi shows completely differentiated sex chromosomes, representing an uncommon evolutionary situation among mouse species. We have performed a detailed analysis of the location of proteins involved in synaptonemal complex assembly (SYCP3), recombination (RPA, RAD51 and MLH1) and sex chromosome inactivation (γH2AX) in this species. We found that neither synapsis nor chiasmata are found between sex chromosomes and their pairing is notably delayed compared to autosomes. Interestingly, the Y chromosome only incorporates RPA and RAD51 in a reduced fraction of spermatocytes, indicating a particular DNA repair dynamic on this chromosome. The analysis of segregation revealed that sex chromosomes are associated until metaphase-I just by a chromatin contact. Unexpectedly, both sex chromosomes remain labelled with γH2AX during first meiotic division. This chromatin contact is probably enough to maintain sex chromosome association up to anaphase-I and, therefore, could be relevant to ensure their reductional segregation. The results presented suggest that the regulation of both DNA repair and epigenetic modifications in the sex chromosomes can have a great impact on the divergence of sex chromosomes and their proper transmission, widening our understanding on the relationship between meiosis and the evolution of sex chromosomes in mammals.
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- 2021
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14. Sex differences in the meiotic behavior of an XX sex chromosome pair in males and females of the mole vole Ellobius tancrei: turning an X into a Y chromosome?
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Julio S. Rufas, María Teresa Parra, Ana Gil-Fernández, Oxana Kolomiets, Jesús Page, Sergey Matveevsky, Irina Bakloushinskaya, Marta Martín-Ruiz, Marta Ribagorda, and Alberto Viera
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Male ,X Chromosome ,Heterochromatin ,Y chromosome ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Meiosis ,Y Chromosome ,Genetics ,Animals ,Genetics (clinical) ,X chromosome ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Sex Characteristics ,Sex Chromosomes ,biology ,Arvicolinae ,Synapsis ,Chromosome ,biology.organism_classification ,Ellobius ,Ellobius tancrei ,Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Sex determination in mammals is usually provided by a pair of chromosomes, XX in females and XY in males. Mole voles of the genus Ellobius are exceptions to this rule. In Ellobius tancrei, both males and females have a pair of XX chromosomes that are indistinguishable from each other in somatic cells. Nevertheless, several studies on Ellobius have reported that the two X chromosomes may have a differential organization and behavior during male meiosis. It has not yet been demonstrated if these differences also appear in female meiosis. To test this hypothesis, we have performed a comparative study of chromosome synapsis, recombination, and histone modifications during male and female meiosis in E. tancrei. We observed that synapsis between the two X chromosomes is limited to the short distal (telomeric) regions of the chromosomes in males, leaving the central region completely unsynapsed. This uneven behavior of sex chromosomes during male meiosis is accompanied by structural modifications of one of the X chromosomes, whose axial element tends to appear fragmented, accumulates the heterochromatin mark H3K9me3, and is associated with a specific nuclear body that accumulates epigenetic marks and proteins such as SUMO-1 and centromeric proteins but excludes others such as H3K4me, ubiH2A, and γH2AX. Unexpectedly, sex chromosome synapsis is delayed in female meiosis, leaving the central region unsynapsed during early pachytene. This region accumulates γH2AX up to the stage in which synapsis is completed. However, there are no structural or epigenetic differences similar to those found in males in either of the two X chromosomes. Finally, we observed that recombination in the sex chromosomes is restricted in both sexes. In males, crossover-associated MLH1 foci are located exclusively in the distal regions, indicating incipient differentiation of one of the sex chromosomes into a neo-Y. Notably, in female meiosis, the central region of the X chromosome is also devoid of MLH1 foci, revealing a lack of recombination, possibly due to insufficient homology. Overall, these results reveal new clues about the origin and evolution of sex chromosomes.
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- 2020
15. Meiosis reveals the early steps in the evolution of a neo-XY sex chromosome pair in the African pygmy mouse Mus minutoides
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Alberto Viera, María Teresa Parra, Nicolas Perrin, Jesús Page, Ana Gil-Fernández, Paul A. Saunders, Pablo López-Jiménez, Julio S. Rufas, Daniel L. Jeffries, Marta Martín-Ruiz, Marta Ribagorda, Frédéric Veyrunes, Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier (UMR ISEM), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-École pratique des hautes études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université de Montpellier (UM)-Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] : UR226-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), and ANR-18-CE02-0018,SEXREV,Ménage à trois: un troisième chromosome sexuel féminisant. Conséquences évolutives et implications pour la génétique du déterminisme du sexe chez les mammifères(2018)
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Male ,Cancer Research ,Sex Differentiation ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Pseudoautosomal region ,Chromosomal translocation ,QH426-470 ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Translocation, Genetic ,Mice ,Y Chromosome ,Morphogenesis ,sex chromosomes, meiosis, evolution ,Cell Cycle and Cell Division ,Genetics (clinical) ,Mammals ,Pseudoautosomal Regions ,0303 health sciences ,Sex Chromosomes ,Sexual Differentiation ,Eutheria ,Chromosome Biology ,Synapsis ,Chromosome Mapping ,Y Chromosomes ,Chiasma ,Chromosomal Aberrations ,Nucleic acids ,Meiosis ,Cell Processes ,Female ,Research Article ,X Chromosome ,DNA recombination ,DNA repair ,Biology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,010603 evolutionary biology ,Chromosomes ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetics ,Animals ,Molecular Biology Techniques ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,Sexual differentiation ,Autosome ,Gene Mapping ,Chromosome ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Cell Biology ,DNA ,Evolutionary biology ,Chromosomal Translocations ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Sex chromosomes of eutherian mammals are highly different in size and gene content, and share only a small region of homology (pseudoautosomal region, PAR). They are thought to have evolved through an addition-attrition cycle involving the addition of autosomal segments to sex chromosomes and their subsequent differentiation. The events that drive this process are difficult to investigate because sex chromosomes in almost all mammals are at a very advanced stage of differentiation. Here, we have taken advantage of a recent translocation of an autosome to both sex chromosomes in the African pygmy mouse Mus minutoides, which has restored a large segment of homology (neo-PAR). By studying meiotic sex chromosome behavior and identifying fully sex-linked genetic markers in the neo-PAR, we demonstrate that this region shows unequivocal signs of early sex-differentiation. First, synapsis and resolution of DNA damage intermediates are delayed in the neo-PAR during meiosis. Second, recombination is suppressed or largely reduced in a large portion of the neo-PAR. However, the inactivation process that characterizes sex chromosomes during meiosis does not extend to this region. Finally, the sex chromosomes show a dual mechanism of association at metaphase-I that involves the formation of a chiasma in the neo-PAR and the preservation of an ancestral achiasmate mode of association in the non-homologous segments. We show that the study of meiosis is crucial to apprehend the onset of sex chromosome differentiation, as it introduces structural and functional constrains to sex chromosome evolution. Synapsis and DNA repair dynamics are the first processes affected in the incipient differentiation of X and Y chromosomes, and they may be involved in accelerating their evolution. This provides one of the very first reports of early steps in neo-sex chromosome differentiation in mammals, and for the first time a cellular framework for the addition-attrition model of sex chromosome evolution., Author summary Sex chromosomes seem to evolve and differentiate at different rates in different taxa. The reasons for this variability are still debated. It is well established that recombination suppression around the sex-determining region triggers differentiation, and several studies have investigated this process from a genetic point of view. However, the cellular context in which recombination arrest occurs has received little attention so far. In this report, we show that meiosis, the cellular division in which pairing and recombination between chromosomes takes place, can affect the incipient differentiation of X and Y chromosomes. Combining cytogenetic and genomic approaches, we found that in the African pygmy mouse Mus minutoides, which has recently undergone sex chromosome-autosome fusions, synapsis and DNA repair dynamics are disturbed along the newly added region of the sex chromosomes. We argue that these alterations are a by-product of the fusion itself, and cause recombination suppression across a large region of the neo-sex chromosome pair. Therefore, we propose that the meiotic context in which sex or neo-sex chromosomes arise is crucial to understand the very early stages of their differentiation, as it could promote or hinder recombination suppression, and therefore impact the rate at which these chromosomes differentiate.
- Published
- 2020
16. γ-H2AX is present at mouse meiotic kinetochores
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Andrea Guajardo, Alberto Viera, Julio S. Rufas, José A. Suja, Manuel M. Valdivia, and María Teresa Parra
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biology ,urogenital system ,Kinetochore ,Chemistry ,fungi ,environment and public health ,Chromatin ,Cell biology ,Serine ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Histone ,Meiosis ,biology.protein ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Homologous recombination ,DNA - Abstract
The histone variant H2AX phosphorylated on serine 139, named γ-H2AX, is a canonical DNA double-strand breaks marker. During mammalian meiotic prophase I, γ-H2AX participates in meiotic recombination, meiotic sex chromosome inactivation and meiotic silencing of unsynapsed chromatin. In this study, we have analyzed the distribution of γ-H2AX during male mouse meiosis by immunofluorescence on spread and squashed spermatocytes. We have found that γ-H2AX locates at the inner kinetochore plate of meiotic kinetochores in both meiotic divisions. Therefore our results, for the first time, uncover a novel role for γ-H2AX at mammalian meiotic kinetochores.
- Published
- 2020
17. Julio S. Rufas: A true chromosome lover
- Author
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Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, Carlos Vega, Juan Luis Santos, María Teresa Parra, Rocío Gómez, and Jesús Page
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Genetics ,Chromosome (genetic algorithm) ,Biology ,Obituary ,Developmental biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,Human genetics - Published
- 2021
18. UNIVERSITY WITHOUT WALLS IN THE THIRD CYCLE PROGRAM: USING ONLINE MANAGEMENT
- Author
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José Miguel Molina Jordá, María Teresa Parra Santos, and Lucila Paola Maiorano
- Published
- 2019
19. XEN implant device versus trabeculectomy, either alone or in combination with phacoemulsification, in open-angle glaucoma patients
- Author
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Juan José Pérez Santonja, Ana María Ceausescu, María Teresa Parra, Noelia Soledad López Grau, and Javier Alejandro Salinas López
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intraocular pressure ,genetic structures ,Open angle glaucoma ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Visual Acuity ,Glaucoma ,Trab ,Trabeculectomy ,Prosthesis Design ,Cataract ,Prosthesis Implantation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ophthalmology ,Medicine ,Humans ,Hyphema ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Phacoemulsification ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Sensory Systems ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Female ,Implant ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Glaucoma, Open-Angle ,Sclera ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
To compare the efficacy and safety of the XEN45 implant with that of trabeculectomy (TRAB), either alone or in combination with phacoemulsification (PHACO), in patients with open-angle glaucoma (OAG). Retrospective, single-center and comparative study conducted on OAG patients. Patients were divided into four groups: group 1 (XEN alone); group 2 (XEN+PHACO); group 3 (TRAB alone); group 4 (TRAB+PHACO). For statistical purposes, groups 1 and 2 were combined (XEN implant), while groups 3 and 4 were also combined (TRAB surgery). The main outcome measure was intraocular pressure (IOP). Ninety-one patients (121 eyes; 65 XEN and 56 TRAB) were included. IOP reduction was − 6.7 (− 10.4 to − 3.0) mmHg, p = 0.0013; − 3.5 (− 5.0 to − 2.0) mmHg, p
- Published
- 2019
20. Meiotic behavior of a complex hexavalent in heterozygous mice for Robertsonian translocations: insights for synapsis dynamics
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Riccardo Castiglia, Soledad Berríos, Marta Martín-Ruiz, Julio S. Rufas, Jesús Page, Emanuela Solano, María Teresa Parra, Raúl Fernández-Donoso, Eliana Ayarza, Marta Ribagorda, Ernesto Capanna, Ana Gil-Fernández, and Alberto Viera
- Subjects
Male ,Heterozygote ,chromosome synapsis ,Karyotype ,Robertsonian translocation ,Chromosomal translocation ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Translocation, Genetic ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Prophase ,Meiosis ,Spermatocytes ,Chromosome regions ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,meiosis ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Synapsis ,Chiasma ,chromosome synapsis, meiosis, Robertsonian translocation ,Chromosome Pairing ,Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Natural populations of the house mouse Mus musculus domesticus show great diversity in chromosomal number due to the presence of chromosomal rearrangements, mainly Robertsonian translocations. Breeding between two populations with different chromosomal configurations generates subfertile or sterile hybrid individuals due to impaired meiotic development. In this study, we have analyzed prophase-I spermatocytes of hybrids formed by crossing mice from Vulcano and Lipari island populations. Both populations have a 2n = 26 karyotype but different combinations of Robertsonian translocations. We studied the progress of synapsis, recombination, and meiotic silencing of unsynapsed chromosomes during prophase-I through the immunolocalization of the proteins SYCP3, SYCP1, γH2AX, RAD51, and MLH1. In these hybrids, a hexavalent is formed that, depending on the degree of synapsis between chromosomes, can adopt an open chain, a ring, or a closed configuration. The frequency of these configurations varies throughout meiosis, with the maximum degree of synapsis occurring at mid pachytene. In addition, we observed the appearance of heterologous synapsis between telocentric and metacentric chromosomes; however, this synapsis seems to be transient and unstable and unsynapsed regions are frequently observed in mid-late pachytene. Interestingly, we found that chiasmata are frequently located at the boundaries of unsynapsed chromosomal regions in the hexavalent during late pachytene. These results provide new clues about synapsis dynamics during meiosis. We propose that mechanical forces generated along chromosomes may induce premature desynapsis, which, in turn, might be counteracted by the location of chiasmata. Despite these and additional meiotic features, such as the accumulation of γH2AX on unsynapsed chromosome regions, we observed a large number of cells that progressed to late stages of prophase-I, indicating that synapsis defects may not trigger a meiotic crisis in these hybrids.
- Published
- 2019
21. Influence of flow swirling on the aerothermodynamic behaviour of flames
- Author
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Robert-Zoltán Szász, V. Mendoza-Garcia, María Teresa Parra-Santos, Artur Gutkowski, and Francisco Castro-Ruiz
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Computer simulation ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Flow (psychology) ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Thermodynamics ,General Chemistry ,Mechanics ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Stagnation point ,Combustion ,law.invention ,Ignition system ,Fuel Technology ,law ,Combustor ,Compressibility ,business - Abstract
The present work focuses on the numerical simulation of diffusive flames in a confined high-swirl burner. Navier–Stokes equations expressed for a time-dependent, compressible, and three-dimensional flow with finite-rate kinetics are solved for lean methane/air mixtures. A simplified mechanism is used to model the combustion. Non-reactive and reactive cases are contrasted for a swirl number of 0.95. Three flames for swirl numbers of 0, 0.6, and 0.95 are analyzed. In swirling flows, the inner recirculation zone is mainly composed of reaction products, which help in ignition of the incoming fuel. Moreover, the forward stagnation point plays an important role, leading to an azimuthal deflection of the flame front.
- Published
- 2015
22. A computational fluid dynamics study of supercritical antisolvent precipitation: Mixing effects on particle size
- Author
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María José Cocero, José Sierra-Pallares, Francisco Castro, Daniele Marchisio, María Teresa Parra-Santos, and Juan García-Serna
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Range (particle radiation) ,Environmental Engineering ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Thermodynamics ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Supercritical fluid ,Particle-size distribution ,Particle ,Particle size ,business ,Process engineering ,Mixing (physics) ,Microscale chemistry ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Supercritical fluids have been extensively used for particle production of many natural and pharmaceutical substances providing useful alternatives for pharmaceutical and nutraceutical particulate system formulation. Among the different methods, the gas or supercritical antisolvent (GAS or SAS) process and its variants, have received a considerable interest due to the wide range of materials that can be micronized. Controlling particle formation in order to nucleate small particles is a key issue in GAS and SAS processes and this is directly related to mixing at all scales. In this work, we focus on numerical simulation of the process, emphasizing mixing modeling. Different mixing devices characterized by different nozzles are analyzed, to get an insight into mixing dynamics and its influence on the final particle size distribution. Results show that mixing is determinant in obtaining small particles, and that mixing at the microscale is a significant parameter to account for in the proper design of precipitators. © 2011 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 2012
- Published
- 2011
23. Incomplete Synapsis and Chiasma Localization: The Chicken or the Egg?
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Adela Calvente, Alberto Viera, Rocío Gómez, José A. Suja, María Teresa Parra, C.G. de la Vega, Julio S. Rufas, Juan L. Santos, Jesús Page, and R. de la Fuente
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Male ,Recombination, Genetic ,Genetics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cohesin ,Synapsis ,Cytogenetics ,Morphogenesis ,Grasshoppers ,Biology ,Chromosomes ,Chiasma ,Chromosome Pairing ,Meiosis ,medicine ,Animals ,Crossing Over, Genetic ,Homologous recombination ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,Recombination - Abstract
In the present study, and as a sincere tribute from the Cytogenetics teams from Madrid to Professor Máximo Drets on his 80th birthday, we have analyzed and compared 3 different grasshopper species with different synaptic patterns, a standard pattern, a second pattern with synapsis restricted to the proximal regions, and a third pattern with synapsis restricted to the distal regions. In the 3 species we have thoroughly analyzed the relationships among cohesin axis morphogenesis, formation of double strand breaks (DSBs) and recombination initiation. Our results demonstrate that in every case recombination initiation precedes synapsis, and that there is a direct relationship between the absence of meiotic recombination and the existence of particular unsynapsed chromosomal regions during prophase I. Based on our results we propose and discuss the mechanisms underlying the existence of incomplete synapsis and the localization of chiasma in wild species.
- Published
- 2010
24. Study of the variational patterns for corrosion kinetics of carbon steel as a function of dissolved oxygen and NaCl concentration
- Author
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Luis Cáceres, María Teresa Parra, and Tomás Vargas
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Hydrogen ,Carbon steel ,Mixed potential theory ,General Chemical Engineering ,Inorganic chemistry ,Oxide ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Concentration effect ,engineering.material ,Corrosion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Electrochemistry ,Pitting corrosion ,engineering ,Anaerobic corrosion - Abstract
The simultaneous occurrences of electrochemical reactions responsible for corrosion of carbon steel in NaCl solutions have been analyzed on the basis of the mixed potential theory in order to determine the combined effect of dissolved oxygen and NaCl concentration on corrosion potential, corrosion current density and hydrogen evolution. This was achieved through the estimation of the functional dependence from both, the dissolved oxygen and the NaCl concentration for each of the kinetic parameters involved in the corrosion process. The main finding is the existence of the critical dissolved oxygen value at which a notorious change in variational pattern for corrosion potential, corrosion current density and hydrogen evolution is observed. The validity of this feature is supported from experimental evidence reported in previous investigations. In this context the role of pitting corrosion, oxide film and diffusional effects are discussed.
- Published
- 2009
25. Numerical modelling of hydrothermal flames. Micromixing effects over turbulent reaction rates
- Author
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María Teresa Parra-Santos, María José Cocero, Juan García-Serna, José Sierra-Pallares, and Francisco Castro
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,business.industry ,Turbulence ,Chemistry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Mixing (process engineering) ,Thermodynamics ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Inlet ,Combustion ,Supercritical fluid ,Micromixing ,Reaction rate ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,business - Abstract
Determining turbulent reaction rates in hydrothermal combustion is a difficult task due to the high sensitivity with mixing of this type of flames. Combining a micromixing model for liquid reactions along with the Eddy dissipation concept (EDC) allows for a good estimation method of the turbulent reaction rates. This novel method is validated for the combustion of methanol in supercritical water, predicting the temperature of the flame and its structure with absolute average deviations below than 10% for most of the cases tested. The influence of different operational variables, i.e. inlet temperature, inlet mass fraction and inlet flow of the fuel have been estimated with high accuracy. The methodology proposed lays the foundations for the subsequent design of supercritical combustion devices, where the geometry of the system has a great influence in the yield of the combustion.
- Published
- 2009
26. Numerical analysis of high-pressure fluid jets: Application to RTD prediction in supercritical reactors
- Author
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María Teresa Parra-Santos, Francisco Castro, José Sierra-Pallares, Juan García-Serna, and María José Cocero
- Subjects
Jet (fluid) ,Turbulence ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Thermodynamics ,Mechanics ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Supercritical flow ,Residence time distribution ,Residence time (fluid dynamics) ,Supercritical fluid ,Fluid dynamics ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,business - Abstract
Computational fluid dynamics is becoming a very important tool in the research and design of new processes. At high pressures, the fluid dynamics behaves very differently than when reduced pressure is lower than unity. The aim of this work is to do an assessment of turbulence models to discern which is the most suitable choice when dealing with supercritical fluids. Two different studies have been carried out: First, an analysis of a turbulent submerged nitrogen jet, secondly a RTD (Residence Time Distribution) analysis of a supercritical carbon dioxide reactor. Both studies have been validated against experimental data. The results show that the Realizable k–ɛ model seems to be the most accurate choice for the simulation of high pressure systems, providing average deviations lower than 18% from experimental values. A methodology based on the solution of a transport equation for the residence time has been used. Using this method, the presence and location of undesirable backmixing zones inside the reactor are better identified. These backmixing zones correspond to the larger eddies present in the reactor, responsible for the long tail of the RTD data, this affect directly to conversion and selectivity.
- Published
- 2009
27. Transcription reactivation during the first meiotic prophase in bugs is not dependent on synapsis
- Author
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Jesús Page, María Teresa Parra, Alberto Viera, Julio S. Rufas, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Transcriptional Activation ,RNA polymerase II ,Biology ,MSUC ,Bivalent (genetics) ,Chromosomal crossover ,Heteroptera ,03 medical and health sciences ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Prophase ,Meiosis ,Spermatocytes ,Genetics ,Animals ,Genetics (clinical) ,Recombination, Genetic ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,MSCI ,Synapsis ,Chromosome ,Biología y Biomedicina / Biología ,Chromosome Pairing ,030104 developmental biology ,biology.protein ,Transcription - Abstract
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Chromosoma. The final authenticated version is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00412-016-0577-6, During meiosis, transcription is precisely regulated in relation to the process of chromosome synapsis. In mammals, transcription is very low until the completion of synapsis in early pachytene, and then reactivates during mid pachytene, up to the end of diplotene. Moreover, chromosomes or chromosomal regions that do not achieve synapsis undergo a specific process of inactivation called meiotic silencing of unpaired chromatin (MSUC). Sex chromosomes, which are mostly unsynapsed, present a special case of inactivation named meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI). Although processes that are similar to MSUC/MSCI have been described in other species like Sordaria and Caenorhabditis elegans, very few studies have been developed in insects. We present a study on the relationships between synapsis and transcription in two hemipteran species (Graphosoma italicum and Carpocoris fuscispinus) that possess holocentric chromosomes but develop different synaptic patterns. We have found that transcription, revealed by the presence of RNA polymerase II, is very low at the beginning of meiosis, but robustly increases during zygotene, long before the completion of synapsis, excepting in the sex chromosomes. In fact, we show that histone H3 methylation at lysine 9 (H3K9me3) may be present in the sex chromosomes at leptotene, thus acting as a likely epigenetic mark for this inactive state. Our results suggest that the meiotic transcription in these two species is differently regulated from that of mammals and, therefore, offer new opportunities to understand the relationship between synapsis and transcription and the mechanisms that govern MSUC/MSCI processes, This work was supported by grants BFU2009-10987 from Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación and grants CGL2014-53106-P and BFU2014-53681-P from Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Spain)
- Published
- 2015
28. The Program of Sex Chromosome Pairing in Meiosis Is Highly Conserved Across Marsupial Species
- Author
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Alberto Viera, Soledad Berríos, José A. Suja, María Teresa Parra, Jesús Page, Raúl Fernández-Donoso, Julio S. Rufas, José Luis Barbero, and Ignacio Prieto
- Subjects
Genetics ,Prophase ,Meiosis ,Evolution of sexual reproduction ,Centromere ,Homologous chromosome ,Chromosome ,Biology ,Y chromosome ,X chromosome - Abstract
Marsupials present a series of genetic and chromosomal features that are highly conserved in very distant species. One of these features is the absence of a homologous region between X and Y chromosomes. According to this genetic differentiation, sex chromosomes do not synapse during the first meiotic prophase in males, and a special structure, the dense plate, maintains sex chromosome association. In this report we present results on the process of meiotic sex chromosome pairing obtained from three different species, Thylamys elegans, Dromiciops gliroides, and Rhyncholestes raphanurus, representing the three orders of American marsupials. We have investigated the relationships between the axial structures organized along sex chromosomes and the formation of the dense plate. We found that in the three species the dense plate arises as a modification of sex chromosomal axial elements, but without the involvement of other meiotic axial structures, such as the cohesin axes. Considering the phylogenetic relationships among the marsupials studied here, our data reinforce the idea that the dense plate emerged early in marsupial evolution as an efficient mechanism to ensure the association of the nonhomologous sex chromosomes. This situation could have influenced the further evolution of sex chromosomes in marsupials.
- Published
- 2005
29. Involvement of the cohesin Rad21 and SCP3 in monopolar attachment of sister kinetochores during mouse meiosis I
- Author
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María Teresa Parra, Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, Juan Luis Santos, Jesús Page, Rocío Gómez, Julio S. Rufas, and Ricardo Benavente
- Subjects
Male ,Centromere ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Chromatids ,Biology ,Mice ,Spermatocytes ,Homologous chromosome ,Animals ,Acetyl-CoA C-Acetyltransferase ,Telophase ,Kinetochores ,Genetics ,Cohesin ,Kinetochore ,Meiosis II ,Nuclear Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Phosphoproteins ,Cell biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Establishment of sister chromatid cohesion ,Meiosis ,Microscopy, Electron ,Synaptonemal complex ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
SCP3 is a meiosis-specific structural protein appearing at axial elements and lateral elements of the synaptonemal complex. We have analysed the behaviour of SCP3 and the cohesin subunit Rad21 in mouse spermatocytes by means of a squashing technique. Our results demonstrate that both proteins colocalize and are partially released from chromosome arms during late prophase I stages, although they persist at the interchromatid domain of metaphase I bivalents. Thus, Rad21 cannot be considered a `mitotic'-specific variant, but coexists with Rec8. During late prophase I SCP3 and Rad21 accumulate at centromeres, and together with the chromosomal passenger proteins INCENP and aurora-B kinase, show a complex `double cornet'-like distribution at the inner domain of metaphase I centromeres beneath the associated sister kinetochores. We have observed that Rad21 and SCP3 are displaced from centromeres during telophase I when sister kinetochores separate, and are not present at metaphase II centromeres. Thus, we hypothesise that Rad21, and the superimposed SCP3 and SCP2, are involved in the monopolar attachment of sister kinetochores during meiosis I, and are not responsible for the maintenance of sister-chromatid centromere cohesion during meiosis II as previously suggested.
- Published
- 2004
30. X and B chromosomes display similar meiotic characteristics in male grasshoppers
- Author
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Adela Calvente, Rocío Gómez, Juan Luis Santos, Alberto Viera, María Teresa Parra, Julio S. Rufas, José A. Suja, and Jesús Page
- Subjects
Male ,X Chromosome ,Grasshoppers ,Biology ,Chromosomes ,Histones ,Meiosis ,Chromosome regions ,Genetics ,Animals ,Phosphorylation ,Grasshopper ,Molecular Biology ,Metaphase ,Genetics (clinical) ,X chromosome ,B chromosome ,Chromosome organisation ,biology.organism_classification ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Rad51 Recombinase ,Chromosome 21 ,Antibodies, Phospho-Specific ,Chromosome 22 - Abstract
We have analysed the chromosome organisation and the location and temporal appearance of different proteins in X and B chromosomes in the grasshopper Eyprepocnemis plorans throughout the first meiotic prophase. We have used adult males that carry a B chromosome collected in natural Spanish populations. The scaffold organisation has been analysed by means of silver stained chromatid cores. In addition, we have detected by immunolabelling the presence of phosphoepitopes, the ensemble of cohesin axes, the location of histone γ-H2AX, and recombinase Rad51. Our observations demonstrate that X and B chromosomes share similarities in chromatin organisation and in the expression of the tested proteins, which strongly differ from those of the autosomes. These results could be interpreted either as a support to the hypothesis that the Bs analysed here originated from the X chromosome, and/or that their chromatin composition and precocious condensation could determine their meiotic behaviour.
- Published
- 2004
31. Dynamic relocalization of the chromosomal passenger complex proteins inner centromere protein (INCENP) and aurora-B kinase during male mouse meiosis
- Author
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Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, Jesús Page, Rocío Gómez, William C. Earnshaw, María Teresa Parra, Mar Carmena, and Julio S. Rufas
- Subjects
Male ,Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone ,Centromere ,Immunoblotting ,Aurora B kinase ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Biology ,Prophase ,Histones ,Chromosome segregation ,Mice ,Aurora Kinases ,Spermatocytes ,Heterochromatin ,Animals ,Aurora Kinase B ,Humans ,Phosphorylation ,Kinetochores ,Metaphase ,Anaphase ,Synaptonemal Complex ,Kinetochore ,INCENP ,Spindle midzone ,3T3 Cells ,Cell Biology ,Cell biology ,Meiosis ,Sister Chromatid Exchange ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
INCENP and aurora-B kinase are two chromosomal passenger proteins that are thought to play key roles in coordinating chromosome segregation with cytokinesis in somatic cells. Here we have analyzed their subcellular distribution, and that of phosphorylated histone H3, and the timing of their relative appearance in mouse spermatocytes during both meiotic divisions. Our results show that in mitotic spermatogonial cells, INCENP and aurora-B show the same pattern of distribution as they do in cultured somatic cells. INCENP labels the synaptonemal complex central element from zygotene up to late pachytene when it begins to relocalize to heterochromatic chromocentres. Aurora-B first appears at chromocentres in late diplotene before the initial phosphorylation of histone H3. INCENP and aurora-B concentrate at centromeres during diakinesis and appear during metaphase I as T-shaped signals at their inner domains, just below associated sister kinetochores. During late anaphase I both proteins relocalize to the spindle midzone. Both proteins colocalize at a connecting strand traversing the centromere region and joining sister kinetochores, in metaphase II centromeres. This strand disappears at the metaphase II/anaphase II transition and relocalizes to the spindle midzone. We discuss the complex dynamic relocalization of the chromosomal passenger complex during prophase I. Additionally, we suggest that this complex may regulate sister-chromatid centromere cohesion during both meiotic divisions.
- Published
- 2003
32. Dynamic relocation of telomere complexes in mouse meiotic chromosomes
- Author
-
Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, Juan Luis Santos, María Teresa Parra, Julio S. Rufas, and Jesús Page
- Subjects
Male ,Genetics ,Synaptonemal Complex ,Chromosome ,Q-FISH ,Telomere ,Biology ,Chromosomes, Mammalian ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Meiosis ,Mice ,Synaptonemal complex ,Prophase ,Spermatocytes ,Centromere ,Animals ,Colchicine ,Kinetochores ,Anaphase - Abstract
Telomeric DNA repeats as well as different specific proteins such as TRF1 and Rap1 associate in functional telomere complexes found at chromosome ends. Using spreading techniques, the presence of TRF1 and Rap1 has been reported at mammalian meiotic telomeres during prophase I. In the present study, we have analysed, by fluorescence in-situ hybridization and immunofluorescence, the appearance and location of telomere complexes during both male mouse meiotic divisions. Additionally, we have studied their relationship with different centromere/kinetochore proteins and the synaptonemal complex protein SCP3. Our results show that telomere complexes are not located at condensed meiotic chromosome tips. Therefore, a change in chromosome structure may occur from pachytene up to metaphase I involving the dynamic relocation of telomere complexes in condensed chromosomes. Moreover, we have found that proximal telomere complexes are relocated internally to kinetochores from metaphase I up to anaphase II. We discuss the functional significance of the location of telomere complexes into internal domains of condensed meiotic chromosomes.
- Published
- 2003
33. Chromatin Organization and Remodeling of Interstitial Telomeric Sites During Meiosis in the Mongolian Gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus)
- Author
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Manfred Alsheimer, Alberto Viera, Marcia Manterola, María Teresa Parra, Roberto de la Fuente, Jesús Page, and Julio S. Rufas
- Subjects
Cell division ,DNA Repair ,DNA repair ,Heterochromatin ,Nuclear Envelope ,Centromere ,Biology ,Investigations ,Histones ,Meiosis ,Genetics ,Animals ,Recombination, Genetic ,Cell Cycle ,Telomere ,Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly ,Chromatin ,Histone ,biology.protein ,Gerbillinae ,Cell Division - Abstract
Telomeric DNA repeats are key features of chromosomes that allow the maintenance of integrity and stability in the telomeres. However, interstitial telomere sites (ITSs) can also be found along the chromosomes, especially near the centromere, where they may appear following chromosomal rearrangements like Robertsonian translocations. There is no defined role for ITSs, but they are linked to DNA damage-prone sites. We were interested in studying the structural organization of ITSs during meiosis, a kind of cell division in which programmed DNA damage events and noticeable chromatin reorganizations occur. Here we describe the presence of highly amplified ITSs in the pericentromeric region of Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) chromosomes. During meiosis, ITSs show a different chromatin conformation than DNA repeats at telomeres, appearing more extended and accumulating heterochromatin markers. Interestingly, ITSs also recruit the telomeric proteins RAP1 and TRF1, but in a stage-dependent manner, appearing mainly at late prophase I stages. We did not find a specific accumulation of DNA repair factors to the ITSs, such as γH2AX or RAD51 at these stages, but we could detect the presence of MLH1, a marker for reciprocal recombination. However, contrary to previous reports, we did not find a specific accumulation of crossovers at ITSs. Intriguingly, some centromeric regions of metacentric chromosomes may bind the nuclear envelope through the association to SUN1 protein, a feature usually performed by telomeres. Therefore, ITSs present a particular and dynamic chromatin configuration in meiosis, which could be involved in maintaining their genetic stability, but they additionally retain some features of distal telomeres, provided by their capability to associate to telomere-binding proteins.
- Published
- 2014
34. Colchicine promotes a change in chromosome structure without loss of sister chromatid cohesion in prometaphase I-arrested bivalents
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Julio S. Rufas, María Teresa Parra, José A. Suja, and Eva M. Rodríguez
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Male ,X Chromosome ,Kinetochore ,Grasshoppers ,Chromatids ,Biology ,Spermatozoa ,Chromosomes ,Cell biology ,Establishment of sister chromatid cohesion ,Meiosis ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Centromere ,Genetics ,Animals ,Sister chromatids ,Chromatid ,Prometaphase ,Colchicine ,Kinetochores ,Sister Chromatid Exchange ,Metaphase ,Mitosis ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
In somatic cells colchicine promotes the arrest of cell division at prometaphase, and chromosomes show a sequential loss of sister chromatid arm and centromere cohesion. In this study we used colchicine to analyse possible changes in chromosome structure and sister chromatid cohesion in prometaphase I-arrested bivalents of the katydid Pycnogaster cucullata. After silver staining we observed that in colchicine-arrested prometaphase I bivalents, and in contrast to what was found in control bivalents, sister kinetochores appeared individualised and sister chromatid axes were completely separated all along their length. However, this change in chromosome structure occurred without loss of sister chromatid arm cohesion. We also employed the MPM-2 monoclonal antibody against mitotic phosphoproteins on control and colchicine-treated spermatocytes. In control metaphase I bivalents this antibody labelled the tightly associated sister kinetochores and the interchromatid domain. By contrast, in colchicine-treated prometaphase I bivalents individualised sister kinetochores appeared labelled, but the interchromatid domain did not show labelling. These results support the notion that MPM-2 phosphoproteins, probably DNA topoisomerase IIalpha, located in the interchromatid domain act as "chromosomal staples" associating sister chromatid axes in metaphase I bivalents. The disappearance of these chromosomal staples would induce a change in chromosome structure, as reflected by the separation of sister kinetochores and sister axes, but without a concomitant loss of sister chromatid cohesion.
- Published
- 2001
35. Dynamics of cohesin subunits in grasshopper meiotic divisions
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Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, Julio S. Rufas, María Teresa Parra, Adela Calvente, Jesús Page, Juan Luis Santos, José Luis Barbero, C. García de la Vega, and R. de la Fuente
- Subjects
Genetics ,Cohesin ,Cohesin complex ,Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone ,Centromere ,Mitosis ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Grasshoppers ,Biology ,Chromosomes ,Cell biology ,Chromosome segregation ,Establishment of sister chromatid cohesion ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Meiosis ,Chromosome Segregation ,Animals ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Separase ,Anaphase ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
The cohesin complex plays a key role for the maintenance of sister chromatid cohesion and faithful chromosome segregation in both mitosis and meiosis. This complex is formed by two structural maintenance of chromosomes protein family (SMC) subunits and two non-SMC subunits: an α-kleisin subunit SCC1/RAD21/REC8 and an SCC3-like protein. Several studies carried out in different species have revealed that the distribution of the cohesin subunits along the chromosomes during meiotic prophase I is not regular and that some subunits are distinctly incorporated at different cell stages. However, the accurate distribution of the different cohesin subunits in condensed meiotic chromosomes is still controversial. Here, we describe the dynamics of the cohesin subunits SMC1α, SMC3, RAD21 and SA1 during both meiotic divisions in grasshoppers. Although these subunits show a similar patched labelling at the interchromatid domain of metaphase I bivalents, SMCs and non-SMCs subunits do not always colocalise. Indeed, SA1 is the only cohesin subunit accumulated at the centromeric region of all metaphase I chromosomes. Additionally, non-SMC subunits do not appear at the interchromatid domain in either single X or B chromosomes. These data suggest the existence of several cohesin complexes during metaphase I. The cohesin subunits analysed are released from chromosomes at the beginning of anaphase I, with the exception of SA1 which can be detected at the centromeres until telophase II. These observations indicate that the cohesin components may be differentially loaded and released from meiotic chromosomes during the first and second meiotic divisions. The roles of these cohesin complexes for the maintenance of chromosome structure and their involvement in homologous segregation at first meiotic division are proposed and discussed.
- Published
- 2012
36. Inactivation or non-reactivation: what accounts better for the silence of sex chromosomes during mammalian male meiosis?
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Jesús Page, Alberto Viera, María Teresa Parra, Marcia Manterola, Soledad Berríos, Raúl Fernández-Donoso, Roberto de la Fuente, and Julio S. Rufas
- Subjects
Male ,X Chromosome ,DNA Repair ,Transcription, Genetic ,SUMO-1 Protein ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Y chromosome ,Histones ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Histone H3 ,Mice ,Prophase ,Meiosis ,Y Chromosome ,Genetics ,Animals ,DNA Breaks, Double-Stranded ,Gene Silencing ,Genetics (clinical) ,biology ,Synapsis ,Nuclear Proteins ,RNA-Binding Proteins ,Chromatin ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Chromosome Pairing ,Histone ,biology.protein ,Pachytene Stage ,RNA Polymerase II ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
During the first meiotic prophase in male mammals, sex chromosomes undergo a program of transcriptional silencing called meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI). MSCI is triggered by accumulation of proteins like BRCA1, ATR, and γH2AX on unsynapsed chromosomes, followed by local changes on the sex chromatin, including histone modifications, incorporation of specific histone variants, non-histone proteins, and RNAs. It is generally thought that MSCI represents the transition of unsynapsed chromatin from a transcriptionally active state to a repressed state. However, transcription is generally low in the whole nucleus during the early stages of the first meiotic prophase, when markers of MSCI first appear, and is then reactivated globally during pachytene. Thus, an alternative possibility is that MSCI represents the targeted maintenance and/or reinforcement of a prior repressed state, i.e., a failure to reactivate. Here, we present an analysis of the temporal and spatial appearance of transcriptional and MSCI markers, as well as chromatin modifications related to transcriptional regulation. We show that levels of RNA pol II and histone H3 acetylated at lysine 9 (H3K9ac) are low during leptotene, zygotene, and early pachytene, but increase strongly in mid-pachytene, indicating that reactivation occurs with some delay after synapsis. However, while transcription markers appear abundantly on the autosomes at mid-pachytene, they are not directed to the sex chromosomes. Interestingly, we found that chromatin modifications related to transcriptional silencing and/or MSCI, namely, histone H3 trimethylated at lysine 9 (H3K9me3), histone H3 monomethylated at lysine 4 (H3K4me1), γH2AX, SUMO1, and XMR, appear on the sex chromosomes before autosomes become reactivated. These results suggest that the onset of MSCI during late zygotene and early pachytene may prevent sex chromosome reactivation during mid-pachytene instead of promoting inactivation de novo. Additionally, we found temporal differences between the X and Y chromosomes in the recruitment of DNA repair and MSCI markers, indicating a differential regulation of these processes. We propose that many of the meiotic defects attributed to failure to silence sex chromosomes could be interpreted as a more general process of transcriptional misregulation that occurs under certain pathological circumstances in zygotene and early pachytene.
- Published
- 2011
37. Quantification of mixing efficiency in turbulent supercritical water hydrothermal reactors
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E. Alonso, Daniele Marchisio, María Teresa Parra-Santos, José Sierra-Pallares, Francisco Castro, and María José Cocero
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Richardson number ,Turbulence ,business.industry ,Applied Mathematics ,General Chemical Engineering ,Particle formation ,Thermodynamics ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Supercritical fluid ,Hydrothermal synthesis ,Mixing ,General Chemistry ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Micromixing ,Particle size ,Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations ,business ,Mixing (physics) ,Mathematics - Abstract
This paper presents a mathematical model able to quantify mixing efficiency in Supercritical Water Hydrothermal Reactors (SWHR) for the production of different types of nanoparticles. In fact, mixing plays a crucial role in determining the final particle size distribution and therefore the final product quality. In this work, mixing of supercritical water streams is studied with Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) by using the Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) approach coupled with an equation of state and a micromixing model, to take into account the effect of molecular mixing. The performance of the model is investigated in three different scenarios, corresponding to very different values of the Richardson number and very different mixer configurations. The main results show how mixing can be quantified by means of a global mixing time and how turbulence enhances the process, leading to better final product characteristics, especially in terms of lower mean particle size and narrower particle size distributions. This confirms previous research on this topic, highlighting the fact that both the mean particle size and the particle size distribution are strongly dependent on the mixing features of the SWHR.
- Published
- 2011
38. A high incidence of meiotic silencing of unsynapsed chromatin is not associated with substantial pachytene loss in heterozygous male mice carrying multiple simple robertsonian translocations
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Alberto Viera, María Teresa Parra, Jesús Page, Julio S. Rufas, Chiara Vasco, Maurizio Zuccotti, Soledad Berríos, Raúl Fernández-Donoso, Marcia Manterola, Silvia Garagna, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
- Subjects
Male ,Heterozygote ,Cancer Research ,Developmental Biology/Germ Cells ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Biología ,Cell Biology/Cell Growth and Division ,Chromosomal translocation ,Meiocyte ,Biology ,Translocation, Genetic ,Mice ,Meiosis ,Spermatocytes ,Genetics ,Homologous chromosome ,Animals ,Gene Silencing ,Molecular Biology ,Metaphase ,Genetics (clinical) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Sex Chromosomes ,Autosome ,Synapsis ,Chromosome ,Chromatin ,Genetics and Genomics/Chromosome Biology ,Chromosome Pairing ,lcsh:Genetics ,Evolutionary Biology/Nuclear Structure and Function ,Female ,Pachytene Stage ,Research Article - Abstract
Meiosis is a complex type of cell division that involves homologous chromosome pairing, synapsis, recombination, and segregation. When any of these processes is altered, cellular checkpoints arrest meiosis progression and induce cell elimination. Meiotic impairment is particularly frequent in organisms bearing chromosomal translocations. When chromosomal translocations appear in heterozygosis, the chromosomes involved may not correctly complete synapsis, recombination, and/or segregation, thus promoting the activation of checkpoints that lead to the death of the meiocytes. In mammals and other organisms, the unsynapsed chromosomal regions are subject to a process called meiotic silencing of unsynapsed chromatin (MSUC). Different degrees of asynapsis could contribute to disturb the normal loading of MSUC proteins, interfering with autosome and sex chromosome gene expression and triggering a massive pachytene cell death. We report that in mice that are heterozygous for eight multiple simple Robertsonian translocations, most pachytene spermatocytes bear trivalents with unsynapsed regions that incorporate, in a stage-dependent manner, proteins involved in MSUC (e.g., γH2AX, ATR, ubiquitinated-H2A, SUMO-1, and XMR). These spermatocytes have a correct MSUC response and are not eliminated during pachytene and most of them proceed into diplotene. However, we found a high incidence of apoptotic spermatocytes at the metaphase stage. These results suggest that in Robertsonian heterozygous mice synapsis defects on most pachytene cells do not trigger a prophase-I checkpoint. Instead, meiotic impairment seems to mainly rely on the action of a checkpoint acting at the metaphase stage. We propose that a low stringency of the pachytene checkpoint could help to increase the chances that spermatocytes with synaptic defects will complete meiotic divisions and differentiate into viable gametes. This scenario, despite a reduction of fertility, allows the spreading of Robertsonian translocations, explaining the multitude of natural Robertsonian populations described in the mouse., Author Summary Cells have different mechanisms to assess the proper occurrence of cellular events. These mechanisms are called checkpoints and are involved in the surveillance of processes such as DNA replication and cell division. A checkpoint at the pachytene stage arrests meiosis when defects in the process of homologous chromosome synapsis and recombination are detected. In mammals, both transcriptional inactivation of chromosomal regions that are not correctly synapsed at pachytene and activation of sex chromosome genes that are normally silent during this stage could contribute to meiotic arrest. We found that when Robertsonian translocations appear in heterozygosis, many synapsis defects occur, and mechanisms that trigger transcriptional silencing of the unsynapsed chromatin are activated. However, meiotic prophase-I progression is not greatly compromised. This questions the ability of the meiotic checkpoints to halt meiosis progression when synapsis is not completed, allowing cells with synapsis defects to reach the first meiotic division. The fertility reduction of Robertsonian heterozygous mice seems to be mainly caused by errors detected by the metaphase-I checkpoint, when most of the spermatocytes die, rather than by synapsis defects. In an evolutionary context, a permissive pachytene checkpoint could contribute to increasing the chances of Robertsonian translocations to spread into natural populations.
- Published
- 2009
39. Sequential Assembly of Centromeric Proteins in Male Mouse Meiosis
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Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, Rocío Gómez, María Teresa Parra, Alberto M. Pendás, Elena Llano, Julio S. Rufas, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
- Subjects
Male ,Cancer Research ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone ,Biología ,Centromere ,Genetics and Genomics/Nuclear Structure and Function ,Kinesins ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Biology ,Mice ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Prophase ,Meiosis ,Spermatocytes ,Genetics ,Animals ,Interkinesis ,Kinetochores ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Metaphase ,Anaphase ,Centromeres ,INCENP ,Kinetochore ,Cell Biology ,Cell biology ,Genetics and Genomics/Chromosome Biology ,lcsh:Genetics ,Research Article - Abstract
10 páginas, 6 figuras.-- et al., The assembly of the mitotic centromere has been extensively studied in recent years, revealing the sequence and regulation of protein loading to this chromosome domain. However, few studies have analyzed centromere assembly during mammalian meiosis. This study specifically targets this approach on mouse spermatocytes. We have found that during prophase I, the proteins of the chromosomal passenger complex Borealin, INCENP, and Aurora-B load sequentially to the inner centromere before Shugoshin 2 and MCAK. The last proteins to be assembled are the outer kinetochore proteins BubR1 and CENP-E. All these proteins are not detected at the centromere during anaphase/telophase I and are then reloaded during interkinesis. The loading sequence of the analyzed proteins is similar during prophase I and interkinesis. These findings demonstrate that the interkinesis stage, regularly overlooked, is essential for centromere and kinetochore maturation and reorganization previous to the second meiotic division. We also demonstrate that Shugoshin 2 is necessary for the loading of MCAK at the inner centromere, but is dispensable for the loading of the outer kinetochore proteins BubR1 and CENP-E., This work was supported by grants BFU2008-00300, BFU2006-06655 and SAF-2008-03172 from Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion. RG has been supported by a Fundación Francisco Cobos and Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación predoctoral fellowships.
- Published
- 2009
40. A Screen for Retrotransposed Imprinted Genes Reveals an Association between X Chromosome Homology and Maternal Germ-Line Methylation
- Author
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María Teresa Parra, Ignacio Prieto, Margarete M. S. Heck, Ana Valdeolmillos, Julio S. Rufas, Jesús Page, Carlos Martínez-A, Juan L. Santos, Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, José Luis Barbero, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
- Subjects
Male ,Cancer Research ,Amino Acid Transport System A ,Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone ,Biología ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Chromosome segregation ,0302 clinical medicine ,Spermatocytes ,Testis ,Tissue Distribution ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Genetics (clinical) ,Cells, Cultured ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Nuclear Proteins ,Chromatin ,Cell biology ,3. Good health ,Establishment of sister chromatid cohesion ,Insects ,Chromatid ,Drosophila ,Separase ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Research Article ,Cohesin complex ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Grasshoppers ,Biology ,Chromatids ,Models, Biological ,Chromosomes ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sister chromatids ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,Cohesin ,Genetics and Genomics ,Cell Biology ,Spermatogonia ,Chromosome Pairing ,Protein Subunits ,lcsh:Genetics ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
A previous version of this article appeared as an Early Online Release on January 2, 2007 (doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.0030028.eor)., The cohesin complexes play a key role in chromosome segregation during both mitosis and meiosis. They establish sister chromatid cohesion between duplicating DNA molecules during S-phase, but they also have an important role during postreplicative double-strand break repair in mitosis, as well as during recombination between homologous chromosomes in meiosis. An additional function in meiosis is related to the sister kinetochore cohesion, so they can be pulled by microtubules to the same pole at anaphase I. Data about the dynamics of cohesin subunits during meiosis are scarce; therefore, it is of great interest to characterize how the formation of the cohesin complexes is achieved in order to understand the roles of the different subunits within them. We have investigated the spatio-temporal distribution of three different cohesin subunits in prophase I grasshopper spermatocytes. We found that structural maintenance of chromosome protein 3 (SMC3) appears as early as preleptotene, and its localization resembles the location of the unsynapsed axial elements, whereas radiation-sensitive mutant 21 (RAD21) (sister chromatid cohesion protein 1, SCC1) and stromal antigen protein 1 (SA1) (sister chromatid cohesion protein 3, SCC3) are not visualized until zygotene, since they are located in the synapsed regions of the bivalents. During pachytene, the distribution of the three cohesin subunits is very similar and all appear along the trajectories of the lateral elements of the autosomal synaptonemal complexes. However, whereas SMC3 also appears over the single and unsynapsed X chromosome, RAD21 and SA1 do not. We conclude that the loading of SMC3 and the non-SMC subunits, RAD21 and SA1, occurs in different steps throughout prophase I grasshopper meiosis. These results strongly suggest the participation of SMC3 in the initial cohesin axis formation as early as preleptotene, thus contributing to sister chromatid cohesion, with a later association of both RAD21 and SA1 subunits at zygotene to reinforce and stabilize the bivalent structure. Therefore, we speculate that more than one cohesin complex participates in the sister chromatid cohesion at prophase I., This work was supported by grants BFU2005–05668-C03–01, BFU2006–06655, BFU2005–01266, BFU2005–02431, and BFU2006–04406 from Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia, España, and grants 1001160016 and 11/BCB/013 from Universidad Autónoma de Madrid and Comunidad de Madrid. The Department of Immunology and Oncology was founded and is supported by the Spanish Council for Scientific Research (CSIC).
- Published
- 2007
41. Condensin I reveals new insights on mouse meiotic chromosome structure and dynamics
- Author
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Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, Julio S. Rufas, María Teresa Parra, Kyoko Yokomori, John A. Schmiesing, Rocío Gómez, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
- Subjects
Male ,Condensin ,Biología ,Mitosis ,lcsh:Medicine ,macromolecular substances ,Chromatids ,Mice ,Prophase ,Spermatocytes ,Centromere ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Animals ,Humans ,Prometaphase ,lcsh:Science ,Metaphase ,Genetics ,Adenosine Triphosphatases ,Multidisciplinary ,Cohesin ,biology ,lcsh:R ,Cell Biology ,Telomere ,Chromosomes, Mammalian ,Spermatogonia ,Cell biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Meiosis ,Protein Subunits ,Telomeres ,Chromosome Structures ,Multiprotein Complexes ,biology.protein ,Chromatid ,lcsh:Q ,Research Article - Abstract
Chromosome shaping and individualization are necessary requisites to warrant the correct segregation of genomes in either mitotic or meiotic cell divisions. These processes are mainly prompted in vertebrates by three multiprotein complexes termed cohesin and condensin I and II. In the present study we have analyzed by immunostaining the appearance and subcellular distribution of condensin I in mouse mitotic and meiotic chromosomes. Our results demonstrate that in either mitotically or meiotically dividing cells, condensin I is loaded onto chromosomes by prometaphase. Condensin I is detectable as a fuzzy axial structure running inside chromatids of condensed chromosomes. The distribution of condensin I along the chromosome length is not uniform, since it preferentially accumulates close to the chromosome ends. Interestingly, these round accumulations found at the condensin I axes termini colocalized with telomere complexes. Additionally, we present the relative distribution of the condensin I and cohesin complexes in metaphase I bivalents. All these new data have allowed us to propose a comprehensive model for meiotic chromosome structure.
- Published
- 2007
42. Meiotic pairing and segregation of achiasmate sex chromosomes in Eutherian mammals: The role of SYCP3 protein
- Author
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María Teresa Parra, Alberto Viera, Jesús Page, José A. Suja, Roberto de la Fuente, Rocío Gómez, Adela Calvente, Julio S. Rufas, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
- Subjects
Male ,Cancer Research ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Biología ,Pseudoautosomal region ,Centromere ,Biology ,Y chromosome ,Eukaryotic chromosome structure ,Chromosome segregation ,Histones ,Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) ,Spermatocytes ,Chromosome Segregation ,Genetics ,Animals ,Small supernumerary marker chromosome ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Recombination, Genetic ,Recombinant proteins ,B chromosome ,Sex Chromosomes ,Models, Genetic ,Synaptonemal Complex ,Synapsis ,Nuclear Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Chromatin ,Synaptonemal complex ,lcsh:Genetics ,Chromosome Pairing ,Rad51 Recombinase ,Gerbillinae ,Research Article - Abstract
In most eutherian mammals, sex chromosomes synapse and recombine during male meiosis in a small region called pseudoautosomal region. However in some species sex chromosomes do not synapse, and how these chromosomes manage to ensure their proper segregation is under discussion. Here we present a study of the meiotic structure and behavior of sex chromosomes in one of these species, the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus). We have analyzed the location of synaptonemal complex (SC) proteins SYCP1 and SYCP3, as well as three proteins involved in the process of meiotic recombination (RAD51, MLH1, and γ-H2AX). Our results show that although X and Y chromosomes are associated at pachytene and form a sex body, their axial elements (AEs) do not contact, and they never assemble a SC central element. Furthermore, MLH1 is not detected on the AEs of the sex chromosomes, indicating the absence of reciprocal recombination. At diplotene the organization of sex chromosomes changes strikingly, their AEs associate end to end, and SYCP3 forms an intricate network that occupies the Y chromosome and the distal region of the X chromosome long arm. Both the association of sex chromosomes and the SYCP3 structure are maintained until metaphase I. In anaphase I sex chromosomes migrate to opposite poles, but SYCP3 filaments connecting both chromosomes are observed. Hence, one can assume that SYCP3 modifications detected from diplotene onwards are correlated with the maintenance of sex chromosome association. These results demonstrate that some components of the SC may participate in the segregation of achiasmate sex chromosomes in eutherian mammals., Author Summary Meiosis is a special kind of cell division that leads to the formation of gametes. During meiosis the number of chromosomes must be halved in the daughter cells, and to do this properly, most organisms use an amazing strategy: during the first of the two meiotic divisions, homologous chromosomes associate in pairs, undergo a reciprocal genetic interchange, and then each member of the pair segregates into a different daughter cell. Genetic exchange, called meiotic recombination, is a key process to ensure that homologous chromosomes remain tightly associated until they segregate. In general, sex chromosomes are subjected to the same processes as the rest of chromosomes. But, of course, exceptions exist. This is the case in the Mongolian gerbil, a mammal whose sex chromosomes pair and segregate during male meiosis without undergoing meiotic recombination. We have found that they are able to do this because some proteins of a meiosis-specific structure, the synaptonemal complex, are reorganized to maintain sex chromosomes associated until they segregate into daughter cells. This kind of behavior resembles the situation found in marsupials and some insect species, indicating a recurrent role of synaptonemal complex components in chromosome segregation when meiotic recombination is missing.
- Published
- 2007
43. Involvement of synaptonemal complex proteins in sex chromosome segregation during marsupial male meiosis
- Author
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Ignacio Prieto, Jesús Page, Raúl Fernández-Donoso, José Luis Barbero, Soledad Berríos, María Teresa Parra, Julio S. Rufas, Roberto de la Fuente, Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
- Subjects
Male ,Cancer Research ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Biología ,Biology ,Lateral element ,Marsupials ,Chromosomal crossover ,Chromosome segregation ,Meiosis ,Spermatocytes ,Chromosome Segregation ,Phosphoprotein Phosphatases ,Genetics ,Animals ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Central element ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Anaphase ,Sex Chromosomes ,Synaptonemal Complex ,Synapsis ,Nuclear Proteins ,Cromosomas Sexuales ,Cell Biology ,Telomere ,Genetics/Chromosome Biology ,Chromosome Pairing ,Synaptonemal complex ,lcsh:Genetics ,Marsupialia ,Evolutionary biology ,Research Article - Abstract
Marsupial sex chromosomes break the rule that recombination during first meiotic prophase is necessary to ensure reductional segregation during first meiotic division. It is widely accepted that in marsupials X and Y chromosomes do not share homologous regions, and during male first meiotic prophase the synaptonemal complex is absent between them. Although these sex chromosomes do not recombine, they segregate reductionally in anaphase I. We have investigated the nature of sex chromosome association in spermatocytes of the marsupial Thylamys elegans, in order to discern the mechanisms involved in ensuring their proper segregation. We focused on the localization of the axial/lateral element protein SCP3 and the cohesin subunit STAG3. Our results show that X and Y chromosomes never appear as univalents in metaphase I, but they remain associated until they orientate and segregate to opposite poles. However, they must not be tied by a chiasma since their separation precedes the release of the sister chromatid cohesion. Instead, we show they are associated by the dense plate, a SCP3-rich structure that is organized during the first meiotic prophase and that is still present at metaphase I. Surprisingly, the dense plate incorporates SCP1, the main protein of the central element of the synaptonemal complex, from diplotene until telophase I. Once sex chromosomes are under spindle tension, they move to opposite poles losing contact with the dense plate and undergoing early segregation. Thus, the segregation of the achiasmatic T. elegans sex chromosomes seems to be ensured by the presence in metaphase I of a synaptonemal complex-derived structure. This feature, unique among vertebrates, indicates that synaptonemal complex elements may play a role in chromosome segregation., Synopsis Meiosis is the fascinating kind of cell division that leads to the formation of gametes, and thus is essential for sexual reproduction. During meiosis, the part of our genome coming from our father and that coming from our mother play the last act of a love story initiated at the very moment of fertilization. This performance includes the search and close pairing of each chromosome with its homolog, the interchange of their genetic information, and their ultimate segregation into different cells. Everything occurs in an ordered and proper fashion because each chromosome is able to recognize its homolog and recombine with it. This ensures they are correctly transmitted to the next generation. But exceptions exist to this general rule. The authors show in this report that in the meiosis of the South American marsupial, Thylamys elegans, the sex chromosomes have the ability to segregate without undergoing meiotic recombination. The sex chromosomes take profit of the organization of a structure only present in marsupials, the dense plate, which serves the purpose of maintaining X and Y chromosomes associated until they segregate to different daughter cells. Surprisingly, this dense plate is composed of two proteins of the synaptonemal complex not meant to be at that place at that time. This finding teaches us that wildlife has plenty of way-out species, most of them unexplored, which challenge our accepted paradigms.
- Published
- 2006
44. A Perikinetochoric Ring Defined by MCAK and Aurora-B as a Novel Centromere Domain
- Author
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Alberto Viera, José A. Suja, Julio S. Rufas, Adela Calvente, María Teresa Parra, Linda Wordeman, Rocío Gómez, Jesús Page, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
- Subjects
Male ,Cancer Research ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Biología ,Centromere ,Aurora B kinase ,Mitosis ,Kinesins ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Spindle Apparatus ,Biology ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Models, Biological ,Aurora-B ,Chromosomes ,Chromosome segregation ,Mice ,Aurora Kinases ,Spermatocytes ,Chromosome Segregation ,Genetics ,Animals ,Aurora Kinase B ,Tissue Distribution ,Telophase ,Prometaphase ,Meiotic Prophase I ,Kinetochores ,Molecular Biology ,Metaphase ,Genetics (clinical) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Anaphase ,Kinetochore ,Nuclear Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Genetics/Chromosome Biology ,Cell biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,lcsh:Genetics ,Meiosis ,Tension ,Research Article ,MCAK - Abstract
Mitotic Centromere-Associated Kinesin (MCAK) is a member of the kinesin-13 subfamily of kinesin-related proteins. In mitosis, this microtubule-depolymerising kinesin seems to be implicated in chromosome segregation and in the correction of improper kinetochore-microtubule interactions, and its activity is regulated by the Aurora-B kinase. However, there are no published data on its behaviour and function during mammalian meiosis. We have analysed by immunofluorescence in squashed mouse spermatocytes, the distribution and possible function of MCAK, together with Aurora-B, during both meiotic divisions. Our results demonstrate that MCAK and Aurora-B colocalise at the inner domain of metaphase I centromeres. Thus, MCAK shows a “cone”-like three-dimensional distribution beneath and surrounding the closely associated sister kinetochores. During the second meiotic division, MCAK and Aurora-B also colocalise at the inner centromere domain as a band that joins sister kinetochores, but only during prometaphase II in unattached chromosomes. During chromosome congression to the metaphase II plate, MCAK relocalises and appears as a ring below each sister kinetochore. Aurora-B also relocalises to appear as a ring surrounding and beneath kinetochores but during late metaphase II. Our results demonstrate that the redistribution of MCAK at prometaphase II/metaphase II centromeres depends on tension across the centromere and/or on the interaction of microtubules with kinetochores. We propose that the perikinetochoric rings of MCAK and Aurora-B define a novel transient centromere domain at least in mouse chromosomes during meiosis. We discuss the possible functions of MCAK at the inner centromere domain and at the perikinetochoric ring during both meiotic divisions., Synopsis The centromere is a chromosome domain essential for the correct partitioning of chromosomes during mitotic and meiotic cell divisions. MCAK is a centromeric protein that depolymerises microtubules, and seems to be implicated in chromosome segregation, and in the correction of improper microtubule interactions with the chromosome. However, there are no published data on its behaviour and function during meiotic divisions. Here, Parra et al. analyse the pattern of distribution of MCAK during male mouse meiosis in relation to Aurora-B, a kinase that regulates its activity. They show that MCAK and Aurora-B appear at the inner domain of metaphase I bivalents and unaligned metaphase II chromosomes. Most importantly, the authors discovered that these proteins relocalise to a novel perikinetochoric ring in aligned metaphase II chromosomes. The discovery of this novel structure adds a new dimension to the understanding of kinetochore structure and biology. The authors propose that, at least for mouse centromeres, the perikinetochoric ring represents a transient centromere domain whose appearance depends on tension across centromeres once microtubules interact with both sister kinetochores. This study shows that the analysis of the behaviour of different centromere proteins during meiosis can offer new insights concerning the centromere functionality.
- Published
- 2006
45. Mammalian SGO2 appears at the inner centromere domain and redistributes depending on tension across centromeres during meiosis II and mitosis
- Author
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Rocío Gómez, José Luis Barbero, Fernando Roncal, María Teresa Parra, Candelas Carreiro, Ana Valdeolmillos, Alberto Viera, Julio S. Rufas, and José A. Suja
- Subjects
Male ,Condensin ,Centromere ,Scientific Report ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Mice ,Spermatocytes ,Genetics ,Sister chromatids ,Animals ,Interkinesis ,Telophase ,Molecular Biology ,Cohesin ,Meiosis II ,Synapsis ,Nuclear Proteins ,Phosphoproteins ,Cell biology ,Establishment of sister chromatid cohesion ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Meiosis ,biology.protein - Abstract
Shugoshin (SGO) is a family of proteins that protect centromeric cohesin complexes from release during mitotic prophase and from degradation during meiosis I. Two mammalian SGO paralogues - SGO1 and SGO2 - have been identified, but their distribution and function during mammalian meiosis have not been reported. Here, we analysed the expression of SGO2 during male mouse meiosis and mitosis. During meiosis I, SGO2 accumulates at centromeres during diplotene, and colocalizes differentially with the cohesin subunits RAD21 and REC8 at metaphase I centromeres. However, SGO2 and RAD21 change their relative distributions during telophase I when sister-kinetochore association is lost. During meiosis II, SGO2 shows a striking tension-dependent redistribution within centromeres throughout chromosome congression during prometaphase II, as it does during mitosis. We propose a model by which the redistribution of SGO2 would unmask cohesive centromere proteins, which would be then released or cleaved by separase, to trigger chromatid segregation to opposite poles.
- Published
- 2006
46. Sex chromosomes, synapsis, and cohesins: a complex affair
- Author
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Alberto Viera, Adela Calvente, José A. Suja, Roberto de la Fuente, María Teresa Parra, Rocío Gómez, Soledad Berríos, Julio S. Rufas, Jesús Page, Raúl Fernández-Donoso, Juan L. Santos, and UAM. Departamento de Biología
- Subjects
Bioquímica ,Cohesin complex ,GeneralLiterature_INTRODUCTORYANDSURVEY ,Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Biology ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Chromosomal crossover ,Prophase ,Meiosis ,Genetics ,Homologous chromosome ,Animals ,Humans ,GeneralLiterature_REFERENCE(e.g.,dictionaries,encyclopedias,glossaries) ,Genetics (clinical) ,Sex Chromosomes ,Cohesin ,Biología celular ,BRCA1 Protein ,Microbiología Eucariota ,Synapsis ,Nuclear Proteins ,Synaptonemal complex ,Chromosome Pairing ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING - Abstract
During first meiotic prophase, homologous chromosomes are held together by the synaptonemal complex, a tripartite proteinaceous structure that extends along the entire length of meiotic bivalents. While this feature is applicable for autosomes, sex chromosomes often escape from this rule. Many species present sex chromosomes that differ between them in their morphology, length, and gene content. Moreover, in some species, sex chromosomes appear in a single dose in one of the sexes. In all of these cases, the behavior of sex chromosomes during meiosis is conspicuously affected, and this includes the assembly and dynamics of the synaptonemal complex. We review in this study the structure of the synaptonemal complex in the sex chromosomes of three groups of organisms, namely: mammals, orthopterans, and hemipterans, which present different patterns of sex chromosome structure and behavior. Of special interest is the analysis of the organization of the axial/lateral elements of the synaptonemal complex in relation to other axial structures organized along meiotic chromosomes, mainly the cohesin axis. The differences found in the behavior of both axial structures reveal that while the organization of a cohesin axis along sex chromosomes is a conserved feature in most organisms and it shows very little morphological variations, the axial/lateral elements of the synaptonemal complex present a wide range of structural modifications on these chromosomes.
- Published
- 2006
47. Size heterogeneity of telomeric DNA in mouse meiotic chromosomes
- Author
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Julio S. Rufas, Alberto Viera, María Teresa Parra, and José A. Suja
- Subjects
Male ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Meiosis ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Metaphase ,Mitosis ,Genetics (clinical) ,In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Peptide nucleic acid ,Chromosome ,DNA ,Telomere ,Chromosomes, Mammalian ,Chromatin ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,chemistry ,Fluorescence in situ hybridization - Abstract
Heterogeneity for the length of telomeric DNA sequences has been found among different mitotic chromosomes in several mammalian species. However, there are no studies reporting such heterogeneity in meiotic chromosomes. To analyse this heterogeneity we have performed fluorescence in situ hybridization with a telomeric (C3TA2)3 peptide nucleic acid (PNA) probe on spread metaphase chromosomes during both male mouse meiotic divisions. Our results show that independently of the meiotic division, telomeric DNA signals were always surrounded by DAPI-stained chromatin, even at centromeric regions. Moreover, we have found heterogeneity for the size of telomeric DNA signals among different chromosomes, between homologues, and even within a given chromosome. We discuss the functional significance of the location of telomeric DNA in condensed meiotic chromosomes, and then the possible origin for the different polymorphisms found.
- Published
- 2002
48. Expression and behaviour of CENP-E at kinetochores during mouse spermatogenesis
- Author
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Ana Valdeolmillos, José A. Suja, María Teresa Parra, Julio S. Rufas, Tim J. Yen, Jesús Page, and Dacheng He
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Male ,Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone ,Macromolecular Substances ,Immunoblotting ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,macromolecular substances ,Centromere protein E ,Biology ,Mice ,Centromere ,Genetics ,Homologous chromosome ,Animals ,Prometaphase ,Kinetochores ,Spermatogenesis ,Genetics (clinical) ,Metaphase ,Kinetochore ,Meiosis II ,Spindle apparatus ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Spindle checkpoint ,Meiosis ,Anaphase ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Centromere protein E (CENP-E) is a microtubule motor protein localised in the outer kinetochore plate and in the fibrous corona that relocalises to the midzone in early anaphase. While its expression in somatic cells has been widely analysed, an accurate description of its behaviour during the two meiotic divisions has not yet been reported. We have carefully analysed by immunofluorescence the subcellular distribution of CENP-E during mouse spermatogenesis. CENP-E first appears during late diakinesis/early prometaphase I as very bright C-shaped or "crescent" signals at each homologous centromere. These crescent CENP-E signals are also observed in unaligned prometaphase I bivalents that are not attached to spindle microtubules, while in bioriented metaphase I bivalents two kinds of fainter signals are observed. Thus, some bivalents present a plate-like signal while others show a pair of spots representing sister kinetochores at each homologous centromere. Double labelling of CENP-E with CENP-G and an anti-centromere serum indicates that in meiosis CENP-E is also located at the outer kinetochore plate and the fibrous corona. During early anaphase I CENP-E relocalises from kinetochores to the midzone where it is detected as fibrous strands, although some residual labelling persists at kinetochores until telophase I. During this stage CENP-E is detected as two parallel plates at the intercellular bridge. The general pattern of labelling during meiosis II is similar to that found during meiosis I. Our results suggest that CENP-E is implicated in the spindle checkpoint, and in chromosome alignment, during the two meiotic divisions in vertebrate males. We also demonstrate that the centromere changes its structure once alignment of all bivalents at the metaphase I plate has been reached.
- Published
- 2002
49. A Perikinetochoric Ring Defined by MCAK as a New Centromere Domain in Meiosis
- Author
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Linda Wordeman, Alberto Viera, Jesús Page, José A. Suja, Rocío Gómez, Julio S. Rufas, Adela Calvente, and María Teresa Parra
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Cancer Research ,Meiosis ,Centromere ,Domain (ring theory) ,Genetics ,Biology ,Ring (chemistry) ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Cell biology - Published
- 2005
50. Aerodynamic characterization of isothermal swirling flows in combustors
- Author
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R. Perez-Dominguez, Robert-Zoltán Szász, Ville Vuorinen, María Teresa Parra-Santos, and Francisco Castro-Ruiz
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Environmental Engineering ,Chemistry ,Turbulence ,020209 energy ,Flow (psychology) ,Mixing (process engineering) ,Thermodynamics ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics ,Aerodynamics ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,Isothermal process ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,General Energy ,0103 physical sciences ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Coaxial ,Image resolution ,Large eddy simulation - Abstract
Swirl flame stabilization is widespread among burners’ manufacturers, but the complex flow patterns are not yet fully understood. The interaction of two confined swirling jets leads to the formation of two recirculation zones being the flame located on the shear layer between the both zones. In such conditions, the lean mixtures can be burned producing low emissions. In the present study, flow structure and turbulent mixing of two isothermal coaxial jets are investigated using Large Eddy Simulation (LES). This is a challenging tool to achieve accuracy but it requests demanding spatial resolution and special treatment of results. By contrasting time-averaged radial profiles with experimental data of a classical benchmark, the model is validated. Results show that LES is able to reproduce the basic features of the flow pattern. Besides, the spectra analysis of instantaneous flow fields provides not only the energy decay but also the most energetic flow structures.
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