The use of two-dimensional electrophoresis to detect mutations induced in mouse spermatogonia by ethylnitrosourea

1983 
Two-dimensional electrophoresis should, in theory, be a suitable method for the measurement of induced mutation rates in the germ cells of mice. Not only can the polypeptide products of a large numer of genes be resolved on a single gel but the detection of mutations which lead to proteins with altered electrophoretic properties (but not necessarily altered function) is possible. Our attempts to apply two-dimensional electrophoresis to the detection of mutation in vivo have involved three stages: (i) the rapid production of gels of high resolution and reproducibility; (ii) the identification of eight interstrain protein variants and demonstration of their simple genetic basis; and (iii) a pilot experiment using the powerful germ-cell mutagen ethylnitrosourea. It was found that although interstrain protein variants could be detected and shown to be inherited in a codominant manner, induced variants were rarely detected even on high quality gels. Only 2 variants were detected among 67 offspring of male mice...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    18
    References
    20
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []