Macronucleus Explained

A macronucleus (formerly also meganucleus) is the larger type of nucleus in ciliates. Macronuclei are polyploid and undergo direct division without mitosis. It controls the non-reproductive cell functions, such as metabolism. During conjugation, the macronucleus disintegrates, and a new one is formed by karyogamy of the micronuclei. Macronuclei contain hundreds to thousands of chromosomes, each present in many copies.[1] [2] There is no mechanism to precisely partition this complex genome equally during nuclear division; thus, how the cell manages to maintain a balanced genome after generations of divisions is unknown.

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Notes and References

  1. Mochizuki K . DNA rearrangements directed by non-coding RNAs in ciliates . Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: RNA . 1 . 3 . 376–87 . 2010-07-15 . 21956937 . 3746294 . 10.1002/wrna.34 .
  2. Book: Pevsner, Jonathan . Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics . vanc . August 2015 . John Wiley & Sons . 978-1-118-58176-6 . en.