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Dive into the research topics where Raúl Fernández-Donoso is active.

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Featured researches published by Raúl Fernández-Donoso.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

A high incidence of meiotic silencing of unsynapsed chromatin is not associated with substantial pachytene loss in heterozygous male mice carrying multiple simple Robertsonian translocations

Marcia Manterola; Jesús Page; Chiara Vasco; Soledad Berríos; María Teresa Parra; Alberto Viera; Julio S. Rufas; Maurizio Zuccotti; Silvia Garagna; Raúl Fernández-Donoso

Meiosis is a complex type of cell division that involves homologous chromosome pairing, synapsis, recombination, and segregation. When any of these processes is altered, cellular checkpoints arrest meiosis progression and induce cell elimination. Meiotic impairment is particularly frequent in organisms bearing chromosomal translocations. When chromosomal translocations appear in heterozygosis, the chromosomes involved may not correctly complete synapsis, recombination, and/or segregation, thus promoting the activation of checkpoints that lead to the death of the meiocytes. In mammals and other organisms, the unsynapsed chromosomal regions are subject to a process called meiotic silencing of unsynapsed chromatin (MSUC). Different degrees of asynapsis could contribute to disturb the normal loading of MSUC proteins, interfering with autosome and sex chromosome gene expression and triggering a massive pachytene cell death. We report that in mice that are heterozygous for eight multiple simple Robertsonian translocations, most pachytene spermatocytes bear trivalents with unsynapsed regions that incorporate, in a stage-dependent manner, proteins involved in MSUC (e.g., γH2AX, ATR, ubiquitinated-H2A, SUMO-1, and XMR). These spermatocytes have a correct MSUC response and are not eliminated during pachytene and most of them proceed into diplotene. However, we found a high incidence of apoptotic spermatocytes at the metaphase stage. These results suggest that in Robertsonian heterozygous mice synapsis defects on most pachytene cells do not trigger a prophase-I checkpoint. Instead, meiotic impairment seems to mainly rely on the action of a checkpoint acting at the metaphase stage. We propose that a low stringency of the pachytene checkpoint could help to increase the chances that spermatocytes with synaptic defects will complete meiotic divisions and differentiate into viable gametes. This scenario, despite a reduction of fertility, allows the spreading of Robertsonian translocations, explaining the multitude of natural Robertsonian populations described in the mouse.


Journal of Cell Science | 2003

The pairing of X and Y chromosomes during meiotic prophase in the marsupial species Thylamys elegans is maintained by a dense plate developed from their axial elements

Jesús Page; Soledad Berríos; Julio S. Rufas; María Teresa Parra; José A. Suja; C. Heyting; Raúl Fernández-Donoso

Unlike eutherian males, pairing of the sex chromosomes in marsupial males during the first meiotic prophase is not mediated by a synaptonemal complex. Instead, a specific structure, the dense plate, develops during pachytene between the sex chromosomes. We have investigated the development and structural nature of this asynaptic association in males of the marsupial species Thylamys elegans by means of immunolabelling and electron microscopy techniques. Our results show that the behaviour of male marsupial sex chromosomes during first meiotic prophase is complex, involving modifications of their structure and/or composition. Pairing of the sex chromosomes and formation of the dense plate take place in mid pachytene, paralleling morphological changes in the sex chromosomal axial elements. Components of the central element of the synaptonemal complex were not found in the sex body, in agreement with ultrastructural studies that reported the absence of a canonical tripartite synaptonemal complex between male marsupial sex chromosomes. Interestingly, the dense plate is labelled with antibodies against the SCP3 protein of the lateral elements of the synaptonemal complex. Moreover, as sex chromosome axial elements decrease in mass throughout mid-late pachytene, the dense plate increases, suggesting that material moves from the axial elements to the dense plate. Additionally, both sex chromosome axial elements and the dense plate have proteins that are specifically phosphorylated, as revealed by their labelling with the MPM-2 antibody, indicating that they undergo a chromosome-specific regulation process throughout first meiotic prophase. We propose that the unique modifications of the composition and structure of the axial elements of the sex chromosomes in meiotic prophase may result in the proscription of synaptonemal complex formation between male marsupial sex chromosomes, where the dense plate is an extension of the axial elements of sex chromosomes. This replaces synapsis to maintain X and Y association during first meiotic prophase.


Biology of the Cell | 1999

Organisation of complex nuclear domains in somatic mouse cells

María Cristina Cerda; Soledad Berríos; Raúl Fernández-Donoso; Silvia Garagna; Carlo Alberto Redi

The number and associations of heterochromatin chromocenters, nucleoli, centromeres and telomeres were studied in the nucleus of different somatic cells of Mus domesticus. Fibroblasts of the cell line 3T3, kidney cells (primary culture), and bone marrow cells were used. The above mentioned nuclear and chromosome markers were identified by DAPI/actinomycin D, indirect immunofluorescence with anti-centromere antibodies, silver impregnation for nucleolar proteins and fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) with telomeric probes. The quantitative analysis of the nuclei showed that the pericentromeric heterochromatin is organised in about 18 chromocenters per nucleus in the 3T3 cells, and about seven in kidney and bone marrow cells, having generally a peripheral distribution in the nucleus of all the studied cells. Several aggregated centromeres were participating in each of the chromocenters, about four centromeres per 3T3 cell and about six centromeres per kidney and bone marrow cells. Some of the chromocenters were also in close association with nucleoli. The number of telomeric labels per nucleus was as expected for each chromosome set (2n = 68-70 and 2n = 40). About half of the telomeric signals were loosely aggregated within the heterochromatic blocks while the rest were distributed in the nucleus as unrelated units not bound with chromocenters. The three cell types have complex nuclear territories formed by different chromosomal domains: the pericentromeric heterochromatin, centromeres, proximal telomeres and nucleoli. With the exception of some bone marrow cells, we have not found a nuclear polarisation of the analysed chromosomal markers compatible with the Rabl configuration. However, Rabl anaphasic polarisation allows the contact of centromeric regions making possible that centromeric associations arise. If in addition, associative elements such as constitutive heterochromatin or nucleoli are close to the centromeric regions, like in Mus domesticus chromosomes, then the associations might be consolidated and persist until the interphase. These associations may be the origin of the nuclear domains described here for Mus domesticus somatic cells.


Chromosoma | 2012

Inactivation or non-reactivation: what accounts better for the silence of sex chromosomes during mammalian male meiosis?

Jesús Page; Roberto de la Fuente; Marcia Manterola; María Teresa Parra; Alberto Viera; Soledad Berríos; Raúl Fernández-Donoso; Julio S. Rufas

During the first meiotic prophase in male mammals, sex chromosomes undergo a program of transcriptional silencing called meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI). MSCI is triggered by accumulation of proteins like BRCA1, ATR, and γH2AX on unsynapsed chromosomes, followed by local changes on the sex chromatin, including histone modifications, incorporation of specific histone variants, non-histone proteins, and RNAs. It is generally thought that MSCI represents the transition of unsynapsed chromatin from a transcriptionally active state to a repressed state. However, transcription is generally low in the whole nucleus during the early stages of the first meiotic prophase, when markers of MSCI first appear, and is then reactivated globally during pachytene. Thus, an alternative possibility is that MSCI represents the targeted maintenance and/or reinforcement of a prior repressed state, i.e., a failure to reactivate. Here, we present an analysis of the temporal and spatial appearance of transcriptional and MSCI markers, as well as chromatin modifications related to transcriptional regulation. We show that levels of RNA pol II and histone H3 acetylated at lysine 9 (H3K9ac) are low during leptotene, zygotene, and early pachytene, but increase strongly in mid-pachytene, indicating that reactivation occurs with some delay after synapsis. However, while transcription markers appear abundantly on the autosomes at mid-pachytene, they are not directed to the sex chromosomes. Interestingly, we found that chromatin modifications related to transcriptional silencing and/or MSCI, namely, histone H3 trimethylated at lysine 9 (H3K9me3), histone H3 monomethylated at lysine 4 (H3K4me1), γH2AX, SUMO1, and XMR, appear on the sex chromosomes before autosomes become reactivated. These results suggest that the onset of MSCI during late zygotene and early pachytene may prevent sex chromosome reactivation during mid-pachytene instead of promoting inactivation de novo. Additionally, we found temporal differences between the X and Y chromosomes in the recruitment of DNA repair and MSCI markers, indicating a differential regulation of these processes. We propose that many of the meiotic defects attributed to failure to silence sex chromosomes could be interpreted as a more general process of transcriptional misregulation that occurs under certain pathological circumstances in zygotene and early pachytene.


PLOS Genetics | 2005

Involvement of synaptonemal complex proteins in sex chromosome segregation during marsupial male meiosis

Jesús Page; Alberto Viera; María Teresa Parra; Roberto de la Fuente; José A. Suja; Ignacio Prieto; José Luis Barbero; Julio S. Rufas; Soledad Berríos; Raúl Fernández-Donoso

Marsupial sex chromosomes break the rule that recombination during first meiotic prophase is necessary to ensure reductional segregation during first meiotic division. It is widely accepted that in marsupials X and Y chromosomes do not share homologous regions, and during male first meiotic prophase the synaptonemal complex is absent between them. Although these sex chromosomes do not recombine, they segregate reductionally in anaphase I. We have investigated the nature of sex chromosome association in spermatocytes of the marsupial Thylamys elegans, in order to discern the mechanisms involved in ensuring their proper segregation. We focused on the localization of the axial/lateral element protein SCP3 and the cohesin subunit STAG3. Our results show that X and Y chromosomes never appear as univalents in metaphase I, but they remain associated until they orientate and segregate to opposite poles. However, they must not be tied by a chiasma since their separation precedes the release of the sister chromatid cohesion. Instead, we show they are associated by the dense plate, a SCP3-rich structure that is organized during the first meiotic prophase and that is still present at metaphase I. Surprisingly, the dense plate incorporates SCP1, the main protein of the central element of the synaptonemal complex, from diplotene until telophase I. Once sex chromosomes are under spindle tension, they move to opposite poles losing contact with the dense plate and undergoing early segregation. Thus, the segregation of the achiasmatic T. elegans sex chromosomes seems to be ensured by the presence in metaphase I of a synaptonemal complex-derived structure. This feature, unique among vertebrates, indicates that synaptonemal complex elements may play a role in chromosome segregation.


Chromosoma | 2006

Sex chromosomes, synapsis, and cohesins: a complex affair

Jesús Page; Roberto de la Fuente; Rocío Gómez; Adela Calvente; Alberto Viera; María Teresa Parra; Juan L. Santos; Soledad Berríos; Raúl Fernández-Donoso; José A. Suja; Julio S. Rufas

During first meiotic prophase, homologous chromosomes are held together by the synaptonemal complex, a tripartite proteinaceous structure that extends along the entire length of meiotic bivalents. While this feature is applicable for autosomes, sex chromosomes often escape from this rule. Many species present sex chromosomes that differ between them in their morphology, length, and gene content. Moreover, in some species, sex chromosomes appear in a single dose in one of the sexes. In all of these cases, the behavior of sex chromosomes during meiosis is conspicuously affected, and this includes the assembly and dynamics of the synaptonemal complex. We review in this study the structure of the synaptonemal complex in the sex chromosomes of three groups of organisms, namely: mammals, orthopterans, and hemipterans, which present different patterns of sex chromosome structure and behavior. Of special interest is the analysis of the organization of the axial/lateral elements of the synaptonemal complex in relation to other axial structures organized along meiotic chromosomes, mainly the cohesin axis. The differences found in the behavior of both axial structures reveal that while the organization of a cohesin axis along sex chromosomes is a conserved feature in most organisms and it shows very little morphological variations, the axial/lateral elements of the synaptonemal complex present a wide range of structural modifications on these chromosomes.


Chromosoma | 2014

The Robertsonian phenomenon in the house mouse: mutation, meiosis and speciation

Silvia Garagna; Jesús Page; Raúl Fernández-Donoso; Maurizio Zuccotti; Jeremy B. Searle

Many different chromosomal races with reduced chromosome number due to the presence of Robertsonian fusion metacentrics have been described in western Europe and northern Africa, within the distribution area of the western house mouse Mus musculus domesticus. This subspecies of house mouse has become the ideal model for studies to elucidate the processes of chromosome mutation and fixation that lead to the formation of chromosomal races and for studies on the impact of chromosome heterozygosities on reproductive isolation and speciation. In this review, we briefly describe the history of the discovery of the first and subsequent metacentric races in house mice; then, we focus on the molecular composition of the centromeric regions involved in chromosome fusion to examine the molecular characteristics that may explain the great variability of the karyotype that house mice show. The influence that metacentrics exert on the nuclear architecture of the male meiocytes and the consequences on meiotic progression are described to illustrate the impact that chromosomal heterozygosities exert on fertility of house mice—of relevance to reproductive isolation and speciation. The evolutionary significance of the Robertsonian phenomenon in the house mouse is discussed in the final section of this review.


Journal of Mammalian Evolution | 1997

Chromosome Divergences Among American Marsupials and the Australian Affinities of the American Dromiciops

Angel E. Spotorno; Juan Marín; Marco Yévenes; Laura I. Walker; Raúl Fernández-Donoso; Juana Pincheira; M. Soledad Berríos; R. Eduardo Palma

To investigate the phylogenetic relationships of living marsupials, morphometric and G-banded chromosome analyses were made in the Chilean species Dromiciops gliroides (Microbiotheria) and Thylamys elegans (Didelphimorphia). Chromosome arm lengths and patterns of G-bands were compared in at least eight bone marrow metaphase spreads in six and nine specimens, respectively. They were contrasted with those published for another 11 American and Australian genera. Three of six autosomal pairs (A1, A3, and C2) were uniquely shared by Dromiciops and some Australian species, being different in shape and G-banded patterns from those with similar total sizes in Thylamys and other South American didelphoid karyotypes. Such chromosomal correspondences suggest the past occurrence of at least three pericentric inversions. A table of character states constructed from chromosomal G-band comparisons is presented, showing that cytogenetic data agree with Szalays (1982) hypothesis on the affinities of the South American Dromiciops with Australian marsupials.


Human Genetics | 1990

Nuclear architecture of human pachytene spermatocytes: quantitative analysis of associations between nucleolar and XY bivalents

Soledad Berríos; Raúl Fernández-Donoso

SummaryNucleolar association and heterochromatin coalescence have both been invoked as mechanisms involved in the origin of chromosomal associations between nucleolar bivalents themselves, as well as between these bivalents and the XY pair, during meiotic prophase in human spermatocytes. However, these mechanisms do not satisfactorily explain how associating bivalents meet each other within the nuclear space. To elucidate this problem, we have characterized different types of nucleolar-nucleolar and nucleolar-XY bivalent associations, and their frequencies, in light and electron microscope serial sections of spermatocyte nuclei. In the pachytene nucleus, nucleolar bivalent associations were found to involve only one nucleolar sphere of RNP granules connected through a fibrillar center to a chromatin mass composed of two, or more, nucleolar-bivalent short arms. Structural relationships between these elements were examined using 3D computer models of various nucleolar associations. XY and nucleolar bivalents were usually located towards the nuclear periphery associated with the inner face of the nuclear envelope. Some nucleolar bivalents, whether single or associated appeared beside or over XY chromatin. When nucleolar-bivalent short arms (BK) were found over nucleolar or over XY chromatin, their telomeres were unattached to the nuclear envelope and the corresponding synaptonemal complexes were not observed. Ninety nucleoli were found in sixty pachytene nuclei. Thirty six percent of these nucleoli were bound to associated BKs and the remaining 64% to single BKs. Over 40% of individual spermatocytes showed at least one cluster of associated BKs and about 20% presented single or multiple BKs associated with the XY pair. The frequencies of random BK associations, over the total or restricted areas of the nuclear envelope, were calculated according to a probabilistic nuclear model. A correspondence was found in comparing the observed frequencies of associated BKs with those calculated on the basis of bouquet formation. Such an analysis strongly suggests that the occurrence of associations between nucleolar bivalents may arise at random within the bouquet. Thus, the architecture of the meiocyte nucleus, particularly the organization of the bouquet, may be the primary mechanism by which nucleolar bivalents meet each other and, consequently, become associated either through common nucleolus formation or by heterochromatin coalescence.


Genetica | 2004

Number and nuclear localisation of nucleoli in mammalian spermatocytes.

Soledad Berríos; Raúl Fernández-Donoso; Juana Pincheira; Jesús Page; Marcia Manterola; M. Cristina Cerda

In seven mammalian species, including man, the position and number of nucleoli in pachytene spermatocyte nuclei were studied from electron microscope (EM) nuclear sections or bivalent microspreads. The number and position of the nucleolar organiser regions (NORs) in mitotic and meiotic chromosomes were also analysed, using silver staining techniques and in situ hybridisation protocols. The general organisation of pachytene spermatocyte nucleoli was almost the same, with only minor morphological differences between species. The terminal NORs of Thylamys elegans (Didelphoidea, Marsupialia), Dromiciops gliroides (Microbiotheridae, Marsupialia), Phyllotys osgoodi (Rodentia, Muridae) and man, always gave rise to peripheral nucleoli in the spermatocyte nucleus. In turn, the intercalated NORs from Octodon degus, Ctenomys opimus (Rodentia, Octodontidae) and Chinchilla lanigera (Rodentia, Cavidae), gave rise to central nucleoli. In species with a single nucleolar bivalent, just one nucleolus is formed, while in those with multiple nucleolar bivalents a variable number of nucleoli are formed by association of different nucleolar bivalents or NORs that occupy the same nuclear peripheral space (Phyllotis and man). It can be concluded that the position of each nucleolus within the spermatocyte nucleus is mainly dependent upon: (1) the position of the NOR in the nucleolar bivalent synaptonemal complex (SC), (2) the nuclear pathway of the nucleolar bivalent SC, being both telomeric ends attached to the nuclear envelope, and (3) the association between nucleolar bivalents by means of their NOR–nucleolar domains that occupy the same nuclear space. Thus, the distribution of nucleoli within the nuclear space of spermatocytes is non-random and it is consistent with the existence of a species-specific meiotic nuclear architecture.

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Jesús Page

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Julio S. Rufas

Autonomous University of Madrid

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María Teresa Parra

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Alberto Viera

Autonomous University of Madrid

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José A. Suja

Autonomous University of Madrid

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