"Null"-activity and low-activity variants for the liver supernatant isozymes of aldehyde oxidase (designated AOX-1 and AOX-2) were observed in inbred strains and in Harwell linkage testing stocks of Mus musculus. The genetic loci determining the activity of these isozymes (designated Aox-1 and Aox-2
Aldehyde reductase isozymes in the mouse: Evidence for two new loci and localization ofAhr-3on chromosome 7
โ Scribed by Peter B. Mather; Roger S. Holmes
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 718 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-2928
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โฆ Synopsis
Evidence is presented for two new forms of mouse liver and kidney aldehyde reductase activity (designated AHR-3 and AHR-4) resolved using cellulose acetate electrophoresis zymogram techniques and stained by glyceraldehyde and NADPH as substrate and coenzyme, respectively. Activity variants were observed for those isozymes among inbred strains of mice and used in a genetic analyses to support a proposal for two new genetic loci (Ahr-3 and Ah-4) which control the activity phenotype for these isozymes. Segregation analysis indicated that these loci are separately localized on the mouse genome, with Ahr-3 positioned on the distal end of chromosome 7. Liver AHR-2 (or hexonate dehydrogenase) exhibited no detectable phenotypic variation among the 44 inbred strains of mice examined. The AHR-3 and AHR-4 isozymes were readily distinguished from AHR-1 [or aldehyde reductase A2, described previously by Duley and Holmes (Biochem. Genet. 20:1067, 1982)], hexonate dehydrogenase (AHR-2), and alcohol dehydrogenase A2 in terms of their differential substrate, coenzyme, and inhibitor specificities.
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