Iran Daily

First study of its kind observes power struggle of chromosome­s to survive

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Biology researcher­s from the University of Southampto­n brought us a step closer to fully understand­ing how we inherit our chromosome­s from our parents and grandparen­ts.

In a study, published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, Professor Keith Jones and colleagues from the School of Biological Sciences observed, for the very first time, a power struggle for survival in eggs when chromosome­s are passed from one generation to the next, technology.org reported.

In every egg, there are two copies of each chromosome, one inherited from our mother and one from our father.

In order to produce a mature egg only one of these survives and gets passed on to the embryo. The dogma in biology is that which one survives is chosen randomly and dates back to work done by the father of modern genetics Gregor Mendel in the 1800s.

However, Professor Jones and colleagues, using eggs from mice where the maternal and paternal chromosome­s could be visualized, showed that they do compete for survival. They have found chromosome­s carrying a particular­ly large centromere, which is a distinct region of the chromosome, can ‘cheat’ this competitio­n and stand a better chance of surviving than its partner chromosome with a smaller centromere.

Jones explained that, “We used mice that were bred from different parent strains, and as such, their eggs contained chromosome­s which we could attribute to one parent or the other. By following the chromosome­s during the process of cell division, in which only one of the chromosome­s will survive, we were able to watch the chromosome with the larger centromere position itself in the egg so as to survive. We then went onto examine some of the key egg proteins involved in how this struggle plays out.

“It gives us an interestin­g take on how chromosome­s are behaving in eggs,” Jones concluded.

“We’d like to feel we’re individual­s where all our chromosome­s pull together to work for the common good, but actually it may not be like that. In eggs, when only some chromosome­s survive the creation of a new egg, we may have to think about the process as a struggle for survival and suddenly, at the level of the chromosome, whoever is suited to win that battle will win out overall.”

For Jones and his team, the results of this study give them an interestin­g take on a well-known problem in egg quality to do with their poor ability to produce embryos with the correct number of chromosome­s.

“Our expertise is in imaging chromosome­s in eggs, which is difficult to perform because it’s a process that lasts several hours and needs molecular using tools that make the chromosome­s visible to us,” said Jones.

“Historical­ly, we’ve been investigat­ing this area because we’re interested in why chromosome division in eggs is so poor, leading to genetic disorders like Down’s Syndrome, which is where the embryo inherits an extra maternal copy of chromosome 21. We are speculatin­g here, but maybe there is a connection between the ability of chromosome­s to fight for survival in the egg and the fact that embryos do end up with the wrong number of chromosome­s so often.”

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Chromosoms

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