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The genetic control of alkaline phosphatase activity in the duodenum of the mouse
Authors:P. R. V. Nayudu  Florence Moog
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri;(2) Present address: Department of Zoology and Comparative Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia
Abstract:The inheritance of duodenal alkaline phosphatase activity has been studied in two inbred strains of Swiss mice. These two strains consistently maintained a three- to fourfold difference in duodenal phosphatase activity for six generations before the start of the genetic studies. Males of both the high-activity strain (HAS) and the low-activity strain (LAS) were mated to females of the other strain to produce an F1 generation, members of which were sib-mated to produce an F2 generation. The frequency distributions of the parental, F1, and F2 generations reveal that the activity of the enzyme is under polygenic control. Distribution of activities in the F2's derived from HAS grandmothers differs from that of the F2's from LAS grandmothers, indicating that a maternally inherited factor, probably contained in the milk of one strain, influences the activity. Heritability estimates based on half-sib correlation coefficients show that additive genetic variance makes up about 50–70% of the total variance of duodenal phosphatase activity in LAS, and approximately 30–45% in HAS. The latter strain is the more variable, both within generations and within litters; its activity is also more strongly enhanced by injection of substrate into the stomach, and is more severely reduced by starvation. Chromatographic analysis of butanol extracts of phosphatase from 11-day-old mice of the two strains reveals that both contain the same two isozymes. HAS does, however, appear to have 6–8 times as much as LAS of an isozymic form of phosphatase having a relatively high phenylphosphate/beta-glycerophosphate ratio, and only about twice as much of a low PhP/bGP ratio form.Supported by Research Grant GM 03937 from the National Institutes of Health, U.S. Public Health Service.
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