Volume 23, Issue 6 (November 2021) 23, 580–589; 10.4103/aja202153
The organization, regulation, and biological functions of the synaptonemal complex
Feng-Guo Zhang, Rui-Rui Zhang, Jin-Min Gao
Institute of Biomedical Sciences, College of Life Sciences, Key Laboratory of Animal Resistance Biology of Shandong Province, Shandong Normal University, Jinan 250014, China
Correspondence: Dr. JM Gao (jinmingao@sdnu.edu.cn)
Date of Submission 16-Apr-2021 Date of Acceptance 28-Jun-2021 Date of Web Publication 14-Sep-2021
Abstract |
The synaptonemal complex (SC) is a meiosis-specific proteinaceous macromolecular structure that assembles between paired homologous chromosomes during meiosis in various eukaryotes. The SC has a highly conserved ultrastructure and plays critical roles in controlling multiple steps in meiotic recombination and crossover formation, ensuring accurate meiotic chromosome segregation. Recent studies in different organisms, facilitated by advances in super-resolution microscopy, have provided insights into the macromolecular structure of the SC, including the internal organization of the meiotic chromosome axis and SC central region, the regulatory pathways that control SC assembly and dynamics, and the biological functions exerted by the SC and its substructures. This review summarizes recent discoveries about how the SC is organized and regulated that help to explain the biological functions associated with this meiosis-specific structure.
Keywords: chromosome axis; chromosome segregation; crossover; meiosis; meiotic recombination; reproduction; synapsis; synaptonemal complex
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