Carp α-globin gene (CαG) was microinjected into the cytoplasm of fertilized rainbow trout eggs at 1 cell stage treated with glutathione (reduced) to prevent hardening of chorion. About 67% of microinjected eggs hatched out and grew normally. DNA was extracted from the muscle 130-day-old fish or from adipose fin of 10 to 12-month-old fish and analyzed by Southern blot hybridization to determine the presence of CaG. Forty percent of 130-day-old fish and 39% of 10 to 12-month-old fish tested positive for CaG. In 130-day-old fish, CaG was integrated in the host genome, and formed head-to-tail, head-to-head, and tail-to-tail concatemers. In 10 to 12-month-old fish, most of the positive individuals carried several copies of CaG per cell. About 10% of these individuals, however, carried CaG at less than 1 copy per cell on average. This result suggests that both CaG-integrated and non-integrated cells coexisted mosaically in host fish. © 1991, The Japanese Society of Fisheries Science. All rights reserved.
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Yoshizaki, G., Oshiro, T., & Takashima, F. (1991). Introduction of Carp α-Globin Gene into Rainbow Trout. Nippon Suisan Gakkaishi (Japanese Edition), 57(5), 819–824. https://doi.org/10.2331/suisan.57.819