Polytene chromosomes were originally observed in the larval
salivary glands of
Chironomus midges by
Édouard-Gérard Balbiani in 1881. Balbiani described the chromosomal puffs among the tangled thread inside the nucleus, and named it "permanent spireme". In 1890, he observed similar spireme in a ciliated protozoan
Loxophyllum meleagris. The existence of such spireme in
Drosophila melanogaster was reported by Bulgarian geneticist Dontcho Kostoff in 1930. Kostoff predicted that the discs (bands) which he observed were "the actual packets in which inherited characters are passed from generation to generation." The hereditary nature of these structures was not confirmed until they were studied in
Drosophila melanogaster in the early 1930s by German biologists
Emil Heitz and Hans Bauer. In 1930, Heitz studied different species of
Drosophila (
D. melanogaster,
D. simulans,
D. hydei, and
D. virilis) and found that all their interphase chromatins in certain cells were swollen and messy. In 1932, he collaborated with Karl Heinrich Bauer with whom he discovered that the tangled chromosomes having distinct bands are unique to the cells of the salivary glands, midgut, Malphigian tubules, and brain of the flies
Bibio hurtulunus and
Drosophila funebris. The two papers were published in the early 1933. Unaware of these papers, an American geneticist
Theophilus Shickel Painter reported in December 1933 the existence of giant chromosome in
D. melanogaster (followed by a series of papers the following year). Learning of this, Heitz accused Painter of deliberately ignoring their original publication to claim priority of discovery. In 1935,
Hermann J. Muller and A.A. Prokofyeva established that the individual band or part of a band corresponds with a gene in
Drosophila. The same year, P.C. Koller hesitantly introduced the name "polytene" to describe the giant chromosome, writing: ==Occurrence==