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Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase inDrosophila melanogaster: Starch gel electrophoretic variation due to molecular instability

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Abstract

Two starch gel electrophoretic variants of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) in Drosophila melanogasterwere partially purified and characterized biochemically. The difference in their migration on starch gel is not due to a charge difference, but rather to a difference in molecular size due to instability of one of the variants. Crosses between the two variants did not produce offspring showing an intermediate electrophoretic band in the heterozygous female. That an hybrid molecule does exist in the heterozygous female, however, was demonstrated by taking advantage of differences in heat lability and structural stability of the two variants. Hence, we conclude that the G6PD locus in both X-chromosomes is active in each cell in female Drosophila.Our findings with DrosophilaG6PD emphasize the importance to protein variation and enzyme function of mutations leading to amino acid substitutions which do not produce a change in net charge.

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Aided by National Institutes of Health grants HD 00486, HD 00004, and GM 14155.

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Steele, M.W., Young, W.J. & Childs, B. Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase inDrosophila melanogaster: Starch gel electrophoretic variation due to molecular instability. Biochem Genet 2, 159–175 (1968). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01458714

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