"How mice "pee-ceive" who they're related toScientists have uncovered how mice identify their relatives and so choose not to mate with them - by the smell of their urine!
"Instead, another specialised set of proteins, which are produced at high concentration in mouse urine, signal relatedness through their scent. It is these proteins that allow animals to avoid mating with their close kin," says Janet Hurst. The key to the breakthrough was the use in the study of wild as opposed to laboratory-bred mice. Lab mice are all in-bred, so they carry the same urine proteins; as a result, researchers had focused instead on immune system genes. 25th Nov 2007 |
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