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. 2001 Jun;86(Pt 6):668-74.
doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2540.2001.00879.x.

Genetic control of the rate of wound healing in mice

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Genetic control of the rate of wound healing in mice

X Li et al. Heredity (Edinb). 2001 Jun.

Abstract

There have been few studies of the inheritance of wound healing in mammals. In this study, we demonstrate that inbred strains of mice differ significantly in the rate of wound healing. Of the 20 strains tested, fast healers (MRL/MpJ-Fas(lpr) and LG/J) healed wounds four times faster than slow healers (Balb/cByJ and SJL/J). The genetic basis underlying the difference in the healing capacity was analysed using F2 populations of two different crosses. We show that the wound healing is a polygenically determined quantitative trait with an average estimated heritability of 86%. The modes of gene action in these two crosses are different. In the (MRL/MpJ x SJL/J) cross, genes regulating fast healing in MRL/MpJ mice exhibited additive effects, whereas these effects were suppressed by a dominant repressor gene in CBA/J mice in the (MRL/MpJ-Fas(lpr) x CBA/J) cross. Information gained from this investigation provides insight into further study of molecular mechanisms underlying the rate of wound healing in mammals.

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