V.G. Dev
Columbia University
37 Papers
910 Citations
V.G. Dev is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chromosome & Karyotype. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 37 publications. Previous affiliations of V.G. Dev include Population Council & Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
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Papers
Detection of nucleolus organizer regions in chromosomes of human, chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutan and gibbon.
TL;DR: Nucleolus organizer regions were detected by the Ag-AS silver method in fixed metaphase chromosomes from human and primates in each case the sites which have been shown by in situ hybridization to contain the ribosomal RNA genes.
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Quinacrine fluorescent karyotypes of human diploid and heteroploid cell lines.
TL;DR: Quinacrine-fluorescence karyotypes were prepared on a series of human cell lines and were indistinguishable from those obtained from cultured XX blood leukocytes.
103
Identification of the mouse karyotype by quinacrine fluorescence, and tentative assignment of seven linkage groups.
O.J. Miller,D.A. Miller,Richard E. Kouri,P. W. Allderdice,V.G. Dev,M.S. Grewal,John J. Hutton +6 more
TL;DR: A karyotype of the mitotic chromosomes of the house mouse has been prepared based upon quinacrine fluorescence patterns and the tentative assignments of autosomal linkage groups (LG) to chromosomes as follows.
100
5-Methylcytosine in Heterochromatic Regions of Chromosomes: Chimpanzee and Gorilla Compared to the Human
TL;DR: There is diversity among the human, gorilla and chimpanzee in both the size and location of concentrations of 5 MeC, supporting the idea that satellite DNA evolves more rapidly than DNA in the remainder of the chromosome.
68
Regulation of rRNA gene expression in a human familial 14p+ marker chromosome.
TL;DR: The results obtained using in situ labeling and Ag-staining and association frequency indicated that the 14p+ chromosome had no greater nucleolus organizer activity than did the other acrocentrics; the difference in these findings suggests that not all the rRNA genes on the 14P+ chromosome were active.
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