Comparative Chromosome Painting of Four Siberian Vespertilionidae Species with Aselliscus stoliczkanus and Human Probes

Vespertilionidae is the largest chiropteran family that comprises species of different specialization and wide geographic distribution. Up to now, only a few vespertilionid species have been studied by molecular cytogenetic approaches. Here, we have investigated the karyotypic relationships of 4 Ves...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Cytogenetic and Genome Research
Main Authors: Kulemzina, A.I., Nie, W., Trifonov, V.A., Staroselec, Y., Vasenkov, D.A., Volleth, M., Yang, F., Graphodatsky, A.S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: S. Karger AG 2011
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000328834
https://www.karger.com/Article/Pdf/328834
Description
Summary:Vespertilionidae is the largest chiropteran family that comprises species of different specialization and wide geographic distribution. Up to now, only a few vespertilionid species have been studied by molecular cytogenetic approaches. Here, we have investigated the karyotypic relationships of 4 Vespertilionidae species from Siberia by G-banding and comparative chromosome painting. Painting probes from Aselliscus stoliczkanus were used to establish interspecific homologous chromosomal segments in Myotis dasycneme (2n = 44), Murina hilgendorfi (2n = 44), Plecotus auritus (2n = 32), and Vespertilio murinus (2n = 38). Robertsonian translocations and a few inversions differentiated the karyotypes of the examined species. Painting of P. auritus karyotype with human probes revealed 3 previously undetected cryptic segments homologous to human chromosomes ( Homo sapiens, HSA) 8, 15, and 19, respectively. As a consequence, the existence of 2 HSA 4 + 8 syntenies in the P. auritus karyotype has been proven. In addition, a pericentric inversion or centromere shift was revealed on the smallest metacentric P. auritus chromosome 16/17 using the HSA 16 probe explaining the different G-banding pattern in comparison to the homologous Myotis chromosome 16/17.