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Publication : The genetics of tasting in mice. VII. Glycine revisited, and the chromosomal location of Sac and Soa.

First Author  Lush IE Year  1995
Journal  Genet Res Volume  66
Issue  2 Pages  167-74
PubMed ID  8522158 Mgi Jnum  J:29528
Mgi Id  MGI:77060 Doi  10.1017/s0016672300034510
Citation  Lush IE, et al. (1995) The genetics of tasting in mice. VII. Glycine revisited, and the chromosomal location of Sac and Soa. Genet Res 66(2):167-74
abstractText  Previous work which appeared to show that some strains of mice taste glycine solutions as bitter has been found to be in error. The bitterness came from copper glycinate which formed in the brass drinking spouts. Taste testing with copper glycinate shows that the genetical data identifying the gene Glb are still valid. The close linkage of Glb and Rua has been confirmed. Most strains of mice prefer glycine solution to water, presumably because the glycine tastes sweet. The degree of preference for glycine is correlated with the degree of preference for other sweet substances such as saccharin or acesulfame. The gene dpa appears not to be involved. The sweetness tasting gene Sac has been mapped to chromosome 4 at 8.1 +/- 3.4 cM distal to Nppa (formerly Pnd). The bitterness tasting gene Soa is very closely linked to Prp on chromosome 6 (no recombinants among 67 backcross progeny). It is suggested that the sweetness and bitterness tasting genes have descended from a common ancestral tasting gene which existed before the tetraploidization of the genome which took place in early vertebrate evolution.
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