Выбрать главу

Reddy K.C. and Villeneuve A.M., 2004. C. elegans HIM-17 links chromatin modification and competence for initiation of meiotic recombination. Cell 118: 439-452.

Rhoades M.M. and Dempsey E., 1966. The effect of abnormal chromosome 10 on preferential segregation and crossing over in maize. Genetics 53: 989-1020.

Rudd M.K., Mays R.W., Schwartz S., and Willard H.F., 2003. Human artificial chromosomes with alpha satellite-based de novo centromeres show increased frequency of nondisjunction and anaphase lag. Mol. Cell Biol. 23: 7689-7697.

Sadaie M., Naito X., and Ishikawa E., 2003. Stable inheritance of telomere chromatin structure and function in the absence of telomenc repeats. Genes Dev. 17: 2271-2282.

Sandler L. and Hiraizumi Y., 1959. Meiotic drive in natural populations of Drosophila melanogaster. II. Genetic variation at the Segregation-distorter locus. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 45: 1412-1422.

Sharp J.A., Franco A.A., Osley M.A., and Kaufman P.D., 2002. Chromatin assembly factor I and Hir proteins contribute to building functional kinetochores in S. cerevisiae. Genes Dev. 16: 85-100.

Shelby R.D., Monier K., and Sullivan K.E, 2000 Chromatin assembly at kinetochores is uncoupled from DNA replication. J. Cell Biol. 151: 1113-1118.

Shiu P.K. and Metzenberg R.L., 2002. Meiotic silencing by unpaired DNA: Properties, regulation and suppression. Genetics 161: 1483-1495.

Steiner N.L. and Clarke L., 1994. A novel epigenetic effect can alter centromere function in fission yeast. Cell 79: 865-874.

Sullivan B. and Karpen G., 2001. Centromere identity in Drosophila is not determined in vivo by replication timing. J. Cell Biol. 154: 683-690.

Sullivan B.A. and Karpen G.H., 2004. Centromeric chromatin exhibits a histone modification pattern that is distinct from both euchromatin and heterochromatin. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 11. 1076-1083.

Sullivan B.A. and Willard H.F., 1998. Stable dicentric X chromosomes with two functional centromeres. Nat. Genet., 20: 227-228.

Tsubouchi T. and Roeder G.S., 2005. A synaptonemal complex protein promotes homology-independent centromere coupling. Science 308: 870-873.

Turner J.M., Mahadevaiah S.K., Femandez-Capetillo O., Nussenzweig A., XuX., Deng C.X., and Buigoyne P.S., 2005. Silencing of unsynapsed meiotic chromosomes in the mouse. Nat. Genet. 37: 41-47.

Watanabe Y., 2005. Sister chromatid cohesion along arms and at centromeres. Trends Genet. 21: 405-412.

Weinreich M., Palacios DeBeer M.A., and Fox C.A., 2004. The activities of eukaryotic replication origins in chromatin. Biochim. Biophys.Acta 1677: 142-157.

Werren J.H., Nur U., and Eickbush D., 1987. An extrachromosomal factor causing loss of paternal chromosomes. Nature 327: 75-76.

Wu H.Y. and Burgess S.M., 2006. Ndjl, a telomere-associated protein, promotes meiotic recombination in budding yeast. Mol. Cell Biol. 26: 3683-3694.

Yan H., Jin W., Nagaki K., Tian S., Ouyang S., Buell C.R., Talbert P.B., Henikoff S., and Jiang J., 2005. Transcription and histone modifications in the recombination-free region spanning a rice centromere. Plant Cell 17: 3227-3238.

Yoda K., Ando S., Monshita S., Houmura K., Hashimoto K., Takeyasu K., and Okazaki X, 2000. Human centromere protein A (CENP-A) can replace histone H3 in nucleosome reconstitution in vitro. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 97: 7266-7271.

Yu H.G., Hiatt E.N., Chan A., Sweeney M., and Dawe R.K., 1997. Neocentromere-mediated chromosome movement in maize. J. Cell Biol. 139: 831-840.

Alekseyenko A.A. and Kuroda M.I., 2004. Filling gaps in genome organization. Science 303: 1148-1149.

Baarends W.M., Wassenaar E., van der Laan R., Hoogerbrugge J., Sleddens-Linkels E., Hoeijmakers J.H., de Boer P., and Grootegoed J.A., 2005. Silencing of unpaired chromatin and histone H2A ubiquitination in mammalian meiosis. Mol. Cell. Biol. 25: 1041-1053.

Baugh L.R.. Hill A.A., Slonim D.K., Brown E.L., and Hunter C.R, 2003. Composition and dynamics of the Caenorhabditis elegans early embryonic transcriptome. Development 130: 889-900.

Bean C.J., Schaner C.E., and Kelly W.G., 2004. Meiotic pairing and imprinted X chromatin assembly in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nat. Genet. 36: 100-105.

Bender L.B., Cao R., Zhang Y., and Strome S., 2004. The MES-2/ MES-3/MES-6 complex and regulation of histone H3 methylation in C. elegans. Curr. Biol 14: 1639-1643.

Bender L.B., Suth J.. Carroll C.R.. Fong Y., Fingerman I.M.. Cao R., Zhang Y., Briggs S.D., Reinke V., and Strome S., 2006. MES-4, an autosome-associated histone methyltransferase that participates in silencing the X chromosomes in the C. elegans germ line. Development. (In press.)

Carmi I., Kopczynski J.B., and Meyer B.J., 1998. The nuclear hormone receptor SEX-1 is an X-chromosome signal that determines nematode sex. Nature 396: 168-173.

Chu D.S., Dawes H.E., Lieb J.D., Chan R.C., Kuo A.F., and Meyer B.J., 2002. A molecular link between gene-specific and chromosome-wide transcriptional repression. Genes Dev. 16: 796-805.

Cowell I.G., Aucott R., Mahadevaiah S.K., Burgoyne P.S., Huskisson N., Bongiomi S., Prantera G., Fanti L., Pimpinelli S., Wu R., et al., 2002. Heterochromatin, HP1 and methylation at lysine 9 of histone H3 in animals. Chromosoma 111: 22-36.

Csankovszki G., McDonel P., and Meyer B.J.. 2004. Recruitment and spreading of the C elegans dosage compensation complex along X chromosomes. Science 303: 1182-1185.

Dawes H.E., Berlin D.S., Lapidus D.M., Nusbaum C, Davis T.L., and Meyer B.J., 1999. Dosage compensation proteins targeted to X chromosomes by a determinant of hermaphrodite fate. Science 284: 1800-1804.

Fong Y., Bender L., Wang W., and Strome S., 2002. Regulation of the different chromatin states of autosomes and X chromosomes in the germline of C. elegans. Science 296: 2235-2238.

Goday C. and Esteban M.R., 2001. Chromosome elimination in sciarid flies. BioEssays 23: 242-250.

Goldstein P. and Slaton D.E., 1982. The synaptonemal complexes of Caenorhabditis elegans: Comparison of wild-type and mutant strains and pachytene karyotype analysis of wild-type. Chromosoma 84: 585-597.

Haack H. and Hodgkin J., 1991. Tests for parental imprinting in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Mol. Gen. Genet. 228: 482-485.

Handel M.A., 2004. The XYbody: a specialized meiotic chromatin domain. Exp. Cell Res. 296: 57-63.

Hansen D., Hubbard E.J.A., and Schedl T., 2004. Multi-pathway control of the proliferation versus meiotic development decision in the Caenorhabditis elegans germline. Dev. Biol. 268: 342-357.