Abstract

Proteins of the mouse saliva are resolved into about 20 discrete bands by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Sexual dimorphism and monomorphism were found in a subset (Msp-1) of these salivary proteins from different inbred strains. This sexual dimorphism involves a fast moving band (F-type) and a slow moving one (S-type). Mature males of seven strains (A/J, AKR, CBA/J, C3H/HeN, A/Sn, B10.A, and B10. Br) exhibit the S phenotype while mature females of these strains were typed as F. Sexually immature males and females of these strains were uniformly typed as F, but at puberty (5–6 weeks of age) the phenotype of the males switched to types, while the phenotype of the females remained the same. This switch to type S at puberty did not take place in males of four strains (BALB/cAnn, B10.D2, C57BL/6, and C57BL/10); therefore, we conclude that these strains were sexually monomorphic with regard to Msp-1. The phenotype of mature males of C3H/HeN reverted to type F following castration, whereas castrated males and mature females switched to type S in response to testosterone administration. The testosterone treatment had no effect on the type S phenotype of males and females of the sexually monomorphic BALB/cAnn strain. The male-specific type S phenotype of Msp-1 was seen only in mice with H-2 haplotype a or k; thus an association with H-2 haplotype was suggested. All F 1 males of reciprocal crosses involving the sexually dimorphic and monomorphic strains (e.g., C3H/HeN × BALB/cAnn) demonstrated the type S phenotype at puberty.

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