All Stories

  1. Vigorous Dynamics Underlie a Stable Population of the Endangered Snow Leopard Panthera uncia in Tost Mountains, South Gobi, Mongolia
  2. Exploring the evolutionary foundations of empathy: consolation in monkeys
  3. Reconstruction of Ancestral Genomes
  4. Role of KCNQ2 and KCNQ3 genes in juvenile idiopathic epilepsy in Arabian foals
  5. A ZZ/ZW microchromosome system in the spiny softshell turtle, Apalone spinifera, reveals an intriguing sex chromosome conservation in Trionychidae
  6. Social tolerance and adult play in macaque societies: a comparison with different human cultures
  7. Chromosome painting in three-toed sloths: a cytogenetic signature and ancestral karyotype for Xenarthra
  8. The Chromosomes of Afrotheria and Their Bearing on Mammalian Genome Evolution
  9. Evolutionary Molecular Cytogenetics of Catarrhine Primates: Past, Present and Future
  10. A Short Introduction to Cytogenetic Studies in Mammals with Reference to the Present Volume
  11. Comparative Primate Molecular Cytogenetics: Revealing Ancestral Genomes, Marker Order, and Evolutionary New Centromeres
  12. Centromere repositioning in mammals
  13. The genome diversity and karyotype evolution of mammals
  14. Genotyping of Capreolus pygargus Fossil DNA from Denisova Cave Reveals Phylogenetic Relationships between Ancient and Modern Populations
  15. Reconstruction of karyotype evolution in core Glires. I. The genome homology revealed by comparative chromosome painting
  16. Towards Neanderthal Paleogenomics
  17. Primate chromosome evolution: with reference to marker order and neocentromeres
  18. New insights into the karyotypic evolution in muroid rodents revealed by multicolor banding applying murine probes
  19. Karyotype of Chicken – Pheasant Hybrids
  20. Possible Brucellosis in an Early Hominin Skeleton from Sterkfontein, South Africa
  21. Changes of higher order chromatin arrangements during major genome activation in bovine preimplantation embryos
  22. Cross-species chromosome painting in Cetartiodactyla: Reconstructing the karyotype evolution in key phylogenetic lineages
  23. Timing the first human migration into eastern Asia
  24. Evolutionary New Centromeres in Primates
  25. Ancient DNA and forensics genetics: The case of Francesco Petrarca
  26. Chromosomal Rearrangements in Primates
  27. A de novo apparently balanced translocation [46,XY,t(2;9)(p13;p24)] interrupting RAB11FIP5 identifies a potential candidate gene for autism spectrum disorder
  28. Reconstruction of Ancestral Genomes
  29. Multidirectional cross-species painting illuminates the history of karyotypic evolution in Perissodactyla
  30. Primate chromosome evolution: Ancestral karyotypes, marker order and neocentromeres
  31. Exploring Evolution in Ceboidea (Platyrrhini, Primates) by Williams-Beuren Probe (HSA 7q11.23) Chromosome Mapping
  32. Phylogenomic Analysis by Chromosome Sorting and Painting
  33. Genetic analysis of the skeletal remains attributed to Francesco Petrarca
  34. Phylogenomics of species from four genera of New World monkeys by flow sorting and reciprocal chromosome painting
  35. Evolutionary Formation of New Centromeres in Macaque
  36. Reciprocal chromosome painting between three laboratory rodent species
  37. Molecular Evidence for Species-Level Distinctions in Clouded Leopards
  38. Ancestral genomes reconstruction: An integrated, multi-disciplinary approach is needed
  39. Chromosomal Rearrangements in Primates
  40. A highly divergent mtDNA sequence in a Neandertal individual from Italy
  41. The Ancestral Eutherian Karyotype Is Present in Xenarthra
  42. Novel Gene Acquisition on Carnivore Y Chromosomes
  43. Multidirectional chromosome painting reveals a remarkable syntenic homology between the greater galagos and the slow loris
  44. Molecular Views of Human Origins
  45. Recovery of Stem Cells from Cryopreserved Periodontal Ligament
  46. Molecular cytogenetics discards polyploidy in mammals
  47. Novel Gene Acquisition on Carnivore Y Chromosomes
  48. Mapping genomic rearrangements in titi monkeys by chromosome flow sorting and multidirectional in-situ hybridization
  49. Chromosome Painting Shows That Pygathrix nemaeus Has the Most Basal Karyotype Among Asian Colobinae
  50. A chromosome painting test of the basal Eutherian karyotype
  51. The Ancestral Genomes in Primate Phylogeny and Origins: A Molecular Cytogenetic Perspective
  52. Conservation of aphidicolin-induced fragile sites in Papionini (Primates) species and humans
  53. Chromosome painting in the long-tailed field mouse provides insights into the ancestral murid karyotype
  54. Chromosome painting in Callicebus lugens , the species with the lowest diploid number (2 n =16) known in primates
  55. Molecular genetics of Rhabdomys pumilio subspecies boundaries: mtDNA phylogeography and karyotypic analysis by fluorescence in situ hybridization
  56. Reciprocal chromosome painting shows that squirrels, unlike murid rodents, have a highly conserved genome organization
  57. The Lowest Diploid Number (2n = 16) yet Found in Any Primate: Callicebus lugens (Humboldt, 1811)
  58. Chromosome painting reveals that galagos have highly derived karyotypes†
  59. Black rat (Rattus rattus) genomic variability characterized by chromosome painting
  60. Black rat (Rattus rattus) genomic variability characterized by chromosome painting
  61. Genomic homology of the domestic ferret with cats and humans
  62. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) maps chromosomal homologies between the dusky titi and squirrel monkey
  63. Molecular cytogenetic dissection of human chromosomes 3 and 21 evolution
  64. Adaptive radiation in Antarctic notothenioid fish: Studies of genomic change at chromosomal level
  65. Genetic aspects in hominid evolution
  66. Insights into Mammalian Genome Organization and Evolution by Molecular Cytogenetics
  67. Simian Y Chromosomes: species-specific rearrangements of DAZ, RBM, and TSPY versus contiguity of PAR and SRY
  68. Chromosome banding and molecular cytogenetics of the Barbary macaque, Macaca sylvanus
  69. Comparative Chromosome Painting of Primate Genomes
  70. Comparative painting of mammalian chromosomes
  71. Mapping homology between human and black and white colobine monkey chromosomes by fluorescent in situ hybridization
  72. Chromosome painting defines genomic rearrangements between red howler monkey subspecies
  73. Genomic Reorganization in the Concolor Gibbon (Hylobates concolor) Revealed by Chromosome Painting
  74. Genomic reorganization and disrupted chromosomal synteny in the siamang (Hylobates syndactylus) revealed by fluorescence in situ hybridization
  75. Cytogenetic analysis shows extensive genomic rearrangements between red howler (Alouatta seniculus, Linnaeus) subspecies
  76. Taxonomy of Microtus savii (Rodentia, Arvicolidae) in Italy: Cytogenetic and Hybridization Data
  77. Cranial capacity in hominid evolution
  78. Genetic Structure in the Garfagnana (Tuscany, Italy): A Study of Eight Protein Markers by Isoelectric Focusing
  79. A standardized G‐banded karyotype for the raccoon (Procyon lotor)compared with the domestic cat
  80. Cytotaxonomy of antarctic teleosts of the Pagothenia/Trematomus complex (Nototheniidae, Perciformes)
  81. Molecular and classical cytogenetic analyses demonstrate an apomorphic reciprocal chromosomal translocation in Gorilla gorilla
  82. A multiple sex-chromosome system in Antarctic ice-fishes
  83. Homologies in human and Macasa fuscata chromosomes revealed by in situ suppression hybridization with human chromosome specific DNA libraries
  84. Highly Repetitive DNA Patterns in Humans and Selected Catarrhine Primates (Pan troglodytes, Cercopithecus aethiops, Macaca fascicularis)
  85. A Third Karyotype for Galago demidovii Suggests the Existence of Multiple Species
  86. Specific identity and taxonomic position of the extinct Quagga
  87. A rapid fibroblast culture technique for high resolution karyotypes
  88. Molecular cytotaxonomy of primates by chromosomal in situ suppression hybridization
  89. Genome size and «C-heterochromatic-DNA» in man and the african apes
  90. Sequence of DNA replication in Macaca juscata chromosomes: An outgroup for phylogenetic comparison between man and apes
  91. Evidence of gene flow between Sulawesi macaques
  92. Banded karyotypes of 20 Papionini species reveal no necessary correlation with speciation
  93. DA/DAPI fluorescent bands in the chromosomes of Pan paniscus
  94. The chromosomes of Nycticebus coucang (Boddaert, 1785) (Primates: Prosimii)
  95. Standardized karyotypes for the greater Galagos, Galago crassicaudatus E. Geoffroy, 1812 and G. garnettii (Ogilby, 1838) (Primates: Prosimii)
  96. Fluorescent heterochromatin staining in primate chromosomes
  97. Banded Karyotypes of the 44-Chromosome Gibbons
  98. NorDistribution and Satellite Associations inCallithrix Jacchus
  99. Chromosomes of thecercopithecus aethiops species group:C. aethiops (Linnaeus, 1758),C. cynosurus (Scopoli, 1786),C. pygerythrus (Cuvier, 1821), andC. sabaeus (Linnaeus, 1766)
  100. Fine characterization of turbellarian chromosomes I. Giemsa and quinacrine banding in Dugesia polychroa (O. Schmidt)
  101. Pericentric inversion in chromosome 2 without phenotypic effect
  102. The phylogenetic and taxonomic status of Pan paniscus: A chromosomal perspective
  103. On Chromosomes and Hominoid Phylogeny: A Reply to Schwartz
  104. Addendum
  105. High‐resolution chromosomes of rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta)
  106. Mode and tempo in primate chromosome evolution: Implications for hylobatid phylogeny
  107. The Banded Karyotypes of Macaca fuscata Compared with Cercocebus aterrimus
  108. A test of the karyotypic fissioning theory of primate evolution
  109. Karyotypic fissioning
  110. The effect of cell kinetics and harvest time on SCE and NOR associations in <i>Macaca fuscata </i>lymphocytes
  111. Sensitivity of proliferating human breast epithelial cells to hypotonic treatment
  112. Phylogeny of the Hominoidea: The chromosome evidence
  113. Cellular kinetics in lymphocytes of 4 species of macaques measured by BRDU sister-chromatid differential staining
  114. G-banding in the barbary macaque (Macaca sylvanus, Linnaeus, 1758) of Morocco