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Emu
Oil Research
Physiology
of the Emu
Emu/Ostrich Genetics
The
Location Of Z- And W-Linked Marker Genes And Sequence On The Homomorphic
Sex Chromosomes Of The Ostrich And The Emu
A
Ogawa; K Murata; S Mizuno
Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Department of Applied Biological Chemistry
Faculty of Agriculture
Tohoku University
1998 Apr 14
Perhaps the most striking fact about early Cenozoic avian history
some 70 million years ago was the rapid radiation of large, flightless,
ground-living birds. It has been suggested that, for a time, there
was active competition between these large terrestrial birds and the
early mammals. Probably reflecting the above noted early start of
Ratitae of the infraclass Eoaves, the presumptive sex chromosomes
of their present day survivors, such as the emu and the ostrich, largely
remained homomorphic. The signs of genetic differentiation between
their still-homomorphic Z and W chromosomes were tested by using two
marker genes (Z-linked ZOV3 and the gene for the iron-responsive element-binding
protein) and one marker sequence of a part of a presumptive pseudogene
(W-linked EE0.6 of the chicken). Their homologues, maintaining 71-92%
identities to the chicken counterparts, were found in both the emu
(Dromaius novaehollandiae) and the ostrich (Struthio camelus). Their
locations were visualized on chromosome preparations by fluorescence
in situ hybridization. In the case of the emu, these three marker
sequences were localized on both members of the fifth pair of a female,
thus revealing no sign yet of genetic differentiation between the
Z and the W. The finding was the same with regard to both members
of the fourth pair of male ostriches. In the female ostrich, however,
the sequence of the gene for the iron-responsive element-binding protein
was missing from one of the pairs, thus revealing the differentiation
by a small deletion of the W from the Z.

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