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Dive into the research topics where A. Perucatti is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Perucatti.


Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 2000

Comparative FISH mapping of bovid X chromosomes reveals homologies and divergences between the subfamilies Bovinae and Caprinae.

L. Iannuzzi; G.P. Di Meo; A. Perucatti; D. Incarnato; Laurent Schibler; E. P. Cribiu

Comparative FISH mapping of river buffalo (Bubalus bubalis, BBU), sheep (Ovis aries, OAR), and cattle (Bos taurus, BTA) X chromosomes revealed homologies and divergences between the X chromosomes in the subfamilies Bovinae and Caprinae. Twenty-four and 17 loci were assigned for the first time to BBU X and OAR X, respectively, noticeably extending the physical map in these two species. Seventeen loci (four of which for the first time) were also FISH mapped to BTA X and used for comparative mapping studies on the three species, which show three morphologically different X chromosomes: an acrocentric (BBU X), an acrocentric with distinct short arms (OAR X), and a submetacentric (BTA X). The same order of loci were found on BTA X and BBU X, suggesting that a centromere transposition, with loss (cattle) or acquisition (river buffalo) of constitutive heterochromatin, differentiated the X chromosomes of these two bovids. Comparison of bovine (cattle and river buffalo) and caprine (sheep) X chromosomes revealed at least five common chromosome segments, suggesting that multiple transpositions, with retention or loss of constitutive heterochromatin, had occurred during their karyotypic evolution.


Mammalian Genome | 1999

COMPARISON OF THE HUMAN WITH THE SHEEP GENOMES BY USE OF HUMAN CHROMOSOME-SPECIFIC PAINTING PROBES

L. Iannuzzi; Giulia Pia Di Meo; A. Perucatti; D. Incarnato

Abstract. Human chromosome specific painting probes were hybridized on sheep (Ovis aries, 2n = 54) chromosomes by FISH. The painting results on sequentially stained RBA-banded preparations demonstrated high degree of conserved regions between human and sheep genomes. A total of 48 human chromosome segments were detected in sheep chromosomes. Comparisons with sheep gene mapping data available and previous Zoo-FISH data obtained in sheep, cattle, and river buffalo were performed.


Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 2003

The river buffalo (Bubalus bubalis, 2n = 50) cytogenetic map: assignment of 64 loci by fluorescence in situ hybridization and R-banding

L. Iannuzzi; G.P. Di Meo; A. Perucatti; Laurent Schibler; D. Incarnato; D. S. Gallagher; A. Eggen; L. Ferretti; E. P. Cribiu; James E. Womack

Sixty-four genomic BAC-clones mapping five type I (ADCYAP1, HRH1, IL3, RBP3B and SRY) and 59 type II loci, previously FISH-mapped to goat (63 loci) and cattle (SRY) chromosomes, were fluorescence in situ mapped to river buffalo R-banded chromosomes, noticeably extending the physical map of this species. All mapped loci from 26 bovine syntenic groups were located on homeologous chromosomes and chromosome regions of river buffalo and goat (cattle) chromosomes, confirming the high degree of chromosome homeologies among bovids. Furthermore, an improved cytogenetic map of the river buffalo with 293 loci from all 31 bovine syntenic groups is reported.


Chromosome Research | 2005

Chromosome evolution and improved cytogenetic maps of the Y chromosome in cattle, zebu, river buffalo, sheep and goat.

G.P. Di Meo; A. Perucatti; Sandrine Floriot; D. Incarnato; R. Rullo; A. Caputi Jambrenghi; L. Ferretti; G. Vonghia; E. P. Cribiu; A. Eggen; L. Iannuzzi

Comparative FISH-mapping among Y chromosomes of cattle (Bos taurus, 2n = 60, BTA, submetacentric Y chromosome), zebu (Bos indicus, 2n = 60, BIN, acrocentric Y chromosome but with visible small p-arms), river buffalo (Bubalus bubalis, 2n = 50, BBU, acrocentric Y chromosome), sheep (Ovis aries, 2n = 54, OAR, small metacentric Y chromosome) and goat (Capra hircus, 2n = 60, CHI, Y-chromosome as in sheep) was performed to extend the existing cytogenetic maps and improve the understanding of karyotype evolution of these small chromosomes in bovids. C- and R-banding comparison were also performed and both bovine and caprine BAC clones containing the SRY, ZFY, UMN0504, UMN0301, UMN0304 and DYZ10 loci in cattle and DXYS3 and SLC25A6 in goat were hybridized on R-banded chromosomes by FISH. The main results were the following: (a) Y-chromosomes of all species show a typical distal positive C-band which seems to be located at the same region of the typical distal R-band positive; (b) the PAR is located at the telomeres but close to both R-band positive and ZFY in all species; (c) ZFY is located opposite SRYand on different arms of BTA, BIN, OAR/CHI Y chromosomes and distal (but centromeric to ZFY) in BBU-Y; (d) BTA-Y and BIN-Y differ as a result of a centromere transposition or pericentric inversion since they retain the same gene order along their distal chromosome regions and have chromosome arms of different size; (e) BTA-Y and BBU-Y differ in a pericentric inversion with a concomitant loss or gain of heterochromatin; (f) OAR/CHI-Y differs from BBU-Y for a pericentric inversion with a major loss of heterochromatin and from BTA and BIN for a centromere transposition followed by the loss of heterochromatin.


Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 1998

ZOO-FISH and R-banding reveal extensive conservation of human chromosome regions in euchromatic regions of river buffalo chromosomes

L. Iannuzzi; G.P. Di Meo; A. Perucatti; T. Bardaro

Commercially available human chromosome (HSA) painting probes were hybridized on river buffalo (Bubalus bubalis, 2n = 50) chromosomes by using FISH and R-banding techniques. Clear hybridization FITC-signals revealed extensive conservation of human chromosome regions in this species and demonstrated that human chromosome probes primarily paint euchromatic regions (R-bands). The present results are discussed in the light of previous gene mapping data obtained in river buffalo and ZOO-FISH data in cattle, and in relation to the standard bovine chromosome nomenclatures. In particular, HSA 8, HSA 10, HSA 11, and HSA 16+7 paint, respectively, BBU 1p, BBU 4p, BBU 5p, and BBU 24, which are homoeologous, respectively, to cattle chromosomes 25, 28, 29 and 27. Thus, these river buffalo chromosome arms can serve as markers to resolve discrepancies in the nomenclature of cattle and related species.


Caryologia | 1990

A Comparison of G- And R-Banding in Cattle and River Buffalo Prometaphase Chromosomes

L. Iannuzzi; G.P. Di Meo; A. Perucatti; L. Ferrara

SUMMARYA comparison of high resolution G- and R-banding in cattle and river buffalo chromosomes was performed at the 500 band level. Close banding homologies between the two species were apparent. However a loss of pericentromeric G-positive band in chromosome arms lp, 2q, 4p and 5q and a retention of pericentromeric G-positive bands in chromosome 3 and R-positive banding patterns in the five biarmed pairs of river buffalo were observed. A comparison between sex chromosomes of the two species revealed that (a) river buffalo X and Y chromosomes were longer than cattle sex chromosomes, (b) the distal R-positive (G-negative) band in cattle Y chromosome appeared larger than the corresponding one in river buffalo Y chromosome and (c) two pericentric inversions characterized the differences between the submetacentric cattle and acrocentric river buffalo sex chromosomes.


Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 2001

Comparative FISH mapping in river buffalo and sheep chromosomes: assignment of forty autosomal type I loci from sixteen human chromosomes

L. Iannuzzi; G.P. Di Meo; A. Perucatti; Laurent Schibler; D. Incarnato; E. P. Cribiu

Forty autosomal type I loci earlier mapped in goat were comparatively FISH mapped on river buffalo (BBU) and sheep (OAR) chromosomes, noticeably extending the physical map in these two economically important bovids. All loci map on homoeologous chromosomes and chromosome bands, with the exception of COL9A1 mapping on BBU10 (homoeologous to cattle/goat chromosome 9) and OAR9 (homoeologous to cattle/goat chromosome 14). A FISH mapping control with COL9A1 on both cattle and goat chromosomes gave the same results as those obtained in river buffalo and sheep, respectively. Direct G- and R-banding comparisons between Bovinae (cattle and river buffalo) and Caprinae (sheep and goat) chromosomes 9 and 14 confirmed that a simple translocation of a small pericentromeric region occurred between the two chromosomes. Comparisons between physical maps obtained in river buffalo and sheep with those reported in sixteen human chromosomes revealed complex chromosome rearrangements (mainly translocations and inversions) differentiating bovids (Artiodactyls) from humans (Primates).


Sexual Development | 2009

Copy number variation of testis-specific protein, Y-encoded (TSPY) in 14 different breeds of cattle (Bos taurus).

C.K. Hamilton; Laura A. Favetta; G.P. Di Meo; Sandrine Floriot; A. Perucatti; Jaana Peippo; Juha Kantanen; A. Eggen; L. Iannuzzi; W. A. King

Multi-copied gene families are prevalent in mammalian genomes, especially within the Y chromosome. Testis specific protein Y-encoded (TSPY) is present in variable copy number in many mammalian species. Previous studies have estimated that TSPY ranges from 50–200 copies in cattle. To examine TSPY localization on the Y chromosome we employed fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and fiber-FISH. The results show a strong signal on the short arm of the Y chromosome (Yp). To investigate TSPY copy number we used relative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to analyze the DNA of 14 different cattle breeds. Variation both within and between breeds was observed. All breeds show significant variation in TSPY copy number among individual members. Brown Swiss (161 copies, CI = 133–195) had higher average levels of TSPY and Western Fjord Cattle (63 copies, CI = 45–86) had lower levels than some breeds. Overall, however, most breeds had a similar average TSPY copy number. The pooled average was 94 copies (CI = 88–100). The significance of the TSPY array remains uncertain, but as the function of TSPY is unraveled the purpose of the array may become clearer.


Chromosome Research | 2008

An extended river buffalo (Bubalus bubalis, 2n=50) cytogenetic map: assignment of 68 autosomal loci by FISH-mapping and R-banding and comparison with human chromosomes

G.P. Di Meo; A. Perucatti; Sandrine Floriot; H. Hayes; Laurent Schibler; D. Incarnato; D. Di Berardino; John L. Williams; E. P. Cribiu; A. Eggen; L. Iannuzzi

We report an extended river buffalo (Bubalus bubalis, 2n = 50; BBU) cytogenetic map including 388 loci, of which 68 have been FISH-mapped on autosomes in the present study. Ovine and caprine BAC clones containing both type I loci (known genes) and type II loci (simple sequence repeats (SRs), microsatellite marker, sequence-tagged sites (STSs)), previously assigned to sheep chromosomes, have been localized on R-banded river buffalo chromosomes (BBU), which expands the cytogenetic map of this important domestic species and increases our knowledge of the physical organization of its genome. The loci mapped in the present study correspond to loci already localized on homoeologous cattle (and sheep) chromosomes and chromosome bands, further confirming the high degree of chromosome homoeologies among bovids. The comparison of the integrated cytogenetic maps of BBU2p/BBU10 and BBU5p/BBU16 with those of human chromosomes (HSA) 6 and 11, respectively, identified, at least, nine conserved chromosome segments in each case and complex rearrangements differentiating river buffalo (and cattle) and human chromosomes.


Chromosome Research | 2006

Cattle rob(1;29) originating from complex chromosome rearrangements as revealed by both banding and FISH-mapping techniques

G.P. Di Meo; A. Perucatti; Raquel Chaves; Filomena Adega; L. De Lorenzi; L. Molteni; A. De Giovanni; D. Incarnato; Henrique Guedes-Pinto; A. Eggen; L. Iannuzzi

Sixteen carriers of rob(1;29) (one of which was homozygous) from six different breeds (four Italian and two Portuguese), two heterozygous carriers of rob(26;29), three river buffaloes and two sheep were cytogenetically investigated in this study by using banding and FISH-mapping techniques (the latter only in cattle and river buffalo). Single- and dual- colour FISH were used with bovine probes containing both INRA143 (mapping proximally to BTA29) and bovine satellite (SAT) DNA SAT I, SAT III and SAT IV (mapping at the centromeric regions of cattle chromosomes). The combined use of these probes, the comparison of rob(1;29) with the dicentric rob(26;29) and with both river buffalo and sheep chromosomes (biarmed pairs) allowed us to hypothezise that rob(1;29) originated from complex chromosomal rearrangements through at least three sequential events: (a) centric fusion with the formation of a dicentric chromosome; (b) formation of a monocentric chromosome with loss of SAT I from both BTA1 and BTA29, most of SAT IV from BTA29 and, probably, some repeats of SAT III from BTA1; (c) double pericentric inversion or, more probably, a chromosome transposition of a small chromosome segment containing INRA143 from proximal p-arms to proximal q-arm of the translocated chromosome.

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L. Iannuzzi

National Research Council

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G.P. Di Meo

National Research Council

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D. Incarnato

National Research Council

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A. Iannuzzi

National Research Council

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V. Genualdo

National Research Council

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L. Ferrara

National Research Council

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V. Peretti

University of Naples Federico II

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A. Eggen

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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