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EVOLUTION AND VARIATION OF RENIN GENES IN MICE
Douglas P. Dickinson 1, Kenneth W. Gross 1, Nina Piccini 1, and Carol M. Wilson 2
1 Department of Molecular Biology, Roswell Park Memorial Institute,
Buffalo, New York 14263
2 Departments of Pharmacology and Internal Medicine, University
of Texas Health Science Center at Dallas, Southwestern Medical School, Dallas,
Texas 75235
Inbred strains of mice carry Ren-1, a gene encoding the thermostable Renin-1 isozyme. Ren-1 is expressed at relatively low levels in mouse submandibular gland and kidney. Some strains also carry Ren-2, a gene encoding the thermolabile Renin-2 isozyme. Ren-2 is expressed at high levels in the mouse submandibular gland and at very low levels, if at all, in the kidney. Ren-1 and Ren-2 are closely linked on mouse chromosome 1, show extensive homology in coding and noncoding regions and provide a model for studying the regulation of gene expression. An investigation of renin genes and enzymatic activity in wild-derived mice identified several restriction site polymorphisms as well as putative variants in renin gene expression and protein structure. The number of renin genes carried by different subpopulations of wild-derived mice is consistent with the occurrence of a gene duplication event prior to the divergence of M. spretus (2.755.5 million yr ago). This conclusion is in agreement with a prior estimate based upon comparative sequence analysis of Ren-1 and Ren-2 from inbred laboratory mice.
Submitted on May 24, 1984Accepted on July 5, 1984
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