| Literature DB >> 14237210 |
Abstract
Random-bred Hartley strain guinea pigs which do not respond immunologically to conjugates of hapten and poly-L-lysine mere mated with heterozygous guinea pigs which do. These responders were considered heterozygous for this trait since their mating resulted in at least one nonresponder offspring. Of 31 offspring from 10 breeding pairs (nonresponder x heterozygous responder) 14 were responders. There was no evidence that this trait is sex-linked. This finding confirms the view that, in guinea pigs, development of an immune response to the aforementioned conjugates is a genetically transmitted autosomal, unigenic Mendelian dominant trait.Entities:
Keywords: ANTIBODY FORMATION; EXPERIMENTAL LAB STUDY; GENETICS; GUINEA PIGS; HAPTENS; PEPTIDES; PHARMACOLOGY
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Year: 1965 PMID: 14237210 DOI: 10.1126/science.147.3657.517
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728