Abstract

Electrophoretic variants of phosphoglucose isomerase (EC.5.3.1.9) and phosphoglucose mutase (EC.2.7.5.1) have been studied in eight species of freshwater molluscs. Two phenotypes of phosphoglucose isomerase were observed in Melanopsis nodosa and one phenotype was observed in the rest of the species. One phenotype of phosphoglucose mutase was observed in all the species of molluscs studied. Phosphoglucose isomerase is inferred to be a dimer encoded at a single polymorphic locus in Melanoides nodosa. There are two alleles at this locus. Phosphoglucose mutase is inferred to be a monomer encoded at a single monomorphic locus in all species. The electrophoretic analysis revealed that phosphoglucose isomerase enzyme cannot be considered a good taxonomic criterion to differentiate the different members of the six families studied but, on the other hand, it is considered a good taxonomic criterion to differentiate Melanopsis nodosa and Theodoxus jordani. Phosphoglucose mutase is considered a good taxonomic criterion to differentiate the family Melanidae from the remaining five families studied. General protein can be considered a good taxonomic criterion to differentiate the family Corbicullidae from Melanidae, Viviparidae and Neritidae but, on the other hand, it seems to be a less useful taxonomic criterion to differentiate between the Viviparidae and Neritidae.

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