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Published online 18 September 2000. doi:10.1083/jcb.150.6.1223
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© The Rockefeller University Press, 0021-9525/2000//1223 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 150, Number 6, , 2000 1223-1232


Original Article

The Reduction of Chromosome Number in Meiosis Is Determined by Properties Built into the Chromosomes



Leocadia V. Paliulisa,b and R. Bruce Nicklasa,b

a Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708
b Department of Cell Biology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708
LSRC Building, Duke University, Box 91000, Durham, NC 27708.(919) 613-8177(919) 613-8195

In meiosis I, two chromatids move to each spindle pole. Then, in meiosis II, the two are distributed, one to each future gamete. This requires that meiosis I chromosomes attach to the spindle differently than meiosis II chromosomes and that they regulate chromosome cohesion differently. We investigated whether the information that dictates the division type of the chromosome comes from the whole cell, the spindle, or the chromosome itself. Also, we determined when chromosomes can switch from meiosis I behavior to meiosis II behavior. We used a micromanipulation needle to fuse grasshopper spermatocytes in meiosis I to spermatocytes in meiosis II, and to move chromosomes from one spindle to the other. Chromosomes placed on spindles of a different meiotic division always behaved as they would have on their native spindle; e.g., a meiosis I chromosome attached to a meiosis II spindle in its normal fashion and sister chromatids moved together to the same spindle pole. We also showed that meiosis I chromosomes become competent meiosis II chromosomes in anaphase of meiosis I, but not before. The patterns for attachment to the spindle and regulation of cohesion are built into the chromosome itself. These results suggest that regulation of chromosome cohesion may be linked to differences in the arrangement of kinetochores in the two meiotic divisions.

Key Words: kinetochore arrangement • chromosome cohesion • chromosomes • meiosis • micromanipulation



© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press



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