The primary structures of the alpha globins from CE/J, DBA/2J, and a stock of Potter's mice were determined to identify the amino acid substitutions associated with the unique isoelectric focusing patterns of these hemoglobins. In addition, the primary structures of the alpha globins from MOL III and PERU mice were studied in search of amino acid substitutions that may not be detected by isoelectric focusing. CE/J hemoglobin contains a unique kind of alpha globin called chain 5. It differs from the single kind of alpha globin (chain 1) in C57BL/6 by having alanine rather than glycine at position 78. DBA/2J hemoglobin has two kinds of alpha globins: one half is like chain 5 and the other half is like chain 1. The hemoglobin from Potter's stock of Mus musculus molossinus also contains chains 1 and 5, but they are expressed at different levels i.e., 80% chain 1 and 20% chain 5. MOL III hemoglobin has a single kind of a alpha globin identical to that in C57BL/6, and PERU hemoglobin contains approximately 40% chain 1 and 60% chain 4. Chains 1 and 4 have different amino acids at positions 25, 62 and 68. These studies confirm that mouse hemoglobins separable by isoelectric focusing, but not by other means of electrophoresis, have substitutions of neutrally charged amino acids in their alpha chains.
A DBA/2 mouse treated with ethylnitrosourea sired an offspring whose hemoglobin showed an extra band following starch gel electrophoresis. The variant hemoglobin migrated to a more cathodal position in starch gel. Isoelectric focusing indicated that chain 5 of the mutant hemoglobin migrated to a more cathodal position than the normal chain 5 from DBA/2 mice and that the other α-globin, chain 1, was not affected. On focusing gels the phenotype of the mutant allele, Hbay 9, was expressed without dominance to normal chain 5, and Hbay 9 /Hbay 9 homozygotes were fully viable in the laboratory. The molecular basis for the germinal mutation was investigated by analyzing the amino acid sequence of chain 5y9, the mutant form of α-chain 5. A single amino acid substitution (His → Leu) at position 89 was found in chain 5y9. We propose that ethylnitrosourea induced an A → T transversion in the histidine codon at position 89 (CAC → CTC). This mutation has apparently not been observed previously in humans, mice or other mammals, and its novel occurrence may be indicative of other unusual mutational events that do not ordinarily occur in the absence of specific mutagen exposure.
Two electrophoretic polymorphisms affecting lens crystallins, designated LEN-1 and LEN-2, have been discovered among inbred strains of mice. Analysis by isoelectric focusing demonstrated that both crystallins are monomeric proteins with isoelectric points at or above pH 7. Both proteins eluted in the low molecular weight (LM) fraction upon Sephadex G-200 gel filtration but LEN-2 was shown to be larger than LEN-1 by G75SF gel filtration and denaturing gel electrophoresis. Linkage analysis demonstrated that the genes encoding LEN-1 and LEN-2 assort independently. Amino acid analysis of the allelic products of the two genes revealed that genetic variants of each respective crystallin were very similar in amino acid compositions but that LEN-1 and LEN-2 were dissimilar crystallins.
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