Expression of β-glucuronidase haplotypes in prototype and congenic mouse strains
✍ Scribed by Kurt Pfister; Kenneth Paigen; Gordon Watson; Verne Chapman
- Book ID
- 104784202
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 926 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-2928
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
A gene complex consists of a structural gene with its associated regulatory information; together they behave as the functional and evolutionary unit of mammalian chromosomes. The use of congenic lines, in which alternate forms, or haplotypes, oj" a gene complex are transferred into a common genetic background by repeated backcrossing, provides a means of comparing the regulatory properties of different haplotypes of a gene complex without the complications introduced by extraneous genetic differences. We have now carried out such a study of the A, B, and H haplotypes of the ~-glucuronidase gene complex, [Gus], in mice. These haplotypes were derived from strains A/J, C57BL/6J, and C3H/HeJ and were compared against the C57BL/6J genetic background. Enzyme structure was compared in terms of charge (isoelectric point), stability (rate of thermal denaturation), substrate affinity (for 4 MU glucuronide), and antigenicity (reactivity with a standard antibody). Compared to the B form, the enzyme coded by the A haplotype has a lower isoelectric point, and that coded by the H haplotype is less stable. The decreased stability is the result of a lower activation energy for the thermal denaturation reaction. These differences were maintained in the congenic strains. All three enzyme forms showed identical substrate affinities. Antigenicity per enzyme unit was also identical for all three, indicating that none lacks an antigenic site possessed by the others and that they all possess the same catalytic activity per molecule. The expression of alleles of the Gus-t temporal locus within the gene complex was not affected by transfer into the C57BL/6 genetic background. The same developmental
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The possibility of associating starch degradation with bacterial --glucuronidase expression was examined. We proved that starving, in starch medium, amylase-negative Escherichia coli (M94) which has constitutive --glucuronidase greatly reduces (p < 0.01) its background activity, but the addition of