The postnatal persistence of bovine fetal Hemoglobin (F) and its relation to the adult Hemoglobins A and B were investigated by electrophoretic methods. At birth, F made up 41 to 100% of the total hemoglobin of 23 calves. The amount of F diminished rapidly and was replaced entirely by Hemoglobin A in 14 bull calves and four heifer calves at the average ages of 65 and 97 days, respectively. The disappearance of Hemoglobin F from the blood of five calves (Guernseys, Jerseys, Brown Swiss) was obscured by the simultaneous appearance of Hemoglobin B, which has the same electrophoretic mobility as F under the conditions used. Comparisons of electrophoretic mobilities in the pH range 6.5–9.0 showed that Hemoglobin A has a greater net positive charge than B and F throughout, but that the net positive charge of Hemoglobin B is appreciably greater than that of F only below pH 7.4. Above this pH, B and F migrate on paper electrophoretic strips at essentially the same rate. © 1958, American Dairy Science Association. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Grimes, R. M., Duncan, C. W., & Lassiter, C. A. (1958). Bovine Fetal Hemoglobin. I. Postnatal Persistence and Relation to Adult Hemoglobins. Journal of Dairy Science, 41(11), 1527–1533. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(58)91130-5
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