Comparative Cytogenetics (Jun 2013)

A new form of the mole vole Ellobius tancrei Blasius, 1884 (Mammalia, Rodentia) with the lowest chromosome number

  • Irina Bakloushinskaya,
  • Svetlana Romanenko,
  • Natalia Serdukova,
  • Alexander Graphodatsky,
  • Elena Lyapunova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/compcytogen.v7i2.5350
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
pp. 163 – 169

Abstract

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The subterranean mole vole, Ellobius tancrei, with a specific variability in autosomes (2n = 31–54) and unusual sex chromosomes (XX in males and females), represents an amazing model for studying the role of chromosome changes in speciation. New materials from the upper reaches of the Surkhob River in the Pamiro-Alay mountains resulted in the discovery of a new form with 2n = 30. The application of Zoo-FISH and G-banding methods allowed the detection of 13 pairs of autosomes as Robertsonian metacentrics originated after fusions of acrocentrics of an assumed ancestral karyotype of E. tancrei with 2n = 54. The sex chromosomes (XX, in both sexes) and one pair of acrocentric autosomes are the only acrocentrics in this karyotype, and the set with 2n = 30 possesses the lowest possible chromosome number among populations of E. tancrei.