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Publication : A genetic linkage map of the MSM Japanese wild mouse strain with restriction landmark genomic scanning (RLGS).

First Author  Akiyoshi S Year  2000
Journal  Mamm Genome Volume  11
Issue  5 Pages  356-9
PubMed ID  10790533 Mgi Jnum  J:61716
Mgi Id  MGI:1355456 Doi  10.1007/s003350010067
Citation  Akiyoshi S, et al. (2000) A genetic linkage map of the MSM japanese wild mouse strain with restriction landmark genomic scanning (RLGS). Mamm Genome 11(5):356-9
abstractText  A high-resolution genetic map of the Mus musculus molossinus (MSM) Japanese wild mouse strain was constructed with restriction landmark genomic scanning (RLGS) and compared with that of the laboratory strain C3H. MSM is phylogenetically 1 million years apart from common laboratory mouse strains and is distinctly resistant to chemical carcinogenesis. Since it exhibits frequent genetic polymorphisms with laboratory mice but can still be easily crossed with laboratory strains, hybrids between MSM and carcinogen-sensitive laboratory mouse strains provide excellent materials for analysis of modifier genes and genetic changes during carcinogenesis. We have generated MSM backcross progeny with the C3H strain, which is extremely sensitive to hepatocarcinogenesis, to construct the present map. RLGS profiles with two combinations of restriction enzymes (NotI-PvuII-PstI, NotI-PstI-PvuII) yielded more than 2000 spots each. The polymorphism rate was about 39.2%, and of a total of 1732 polymorphic spot loci identified, 1371 could be assigned to specific chromosomes by comparison with 79 microsatellite marker loci. Thus, 1450 loci, on all chromosomes except for Y, effectively mapped 90% of the genome (1431.7 cM length). Although some spots might be derived from the same NotI site, each NotI site potentially generating two fragments, the presence of at least 515 loci groups with different progeny distribution patterns dispersed through the genome with an average spacing of 3 cM, means that this genetic map should be useful for analysis of various biological phenomena, including carcinogenesis and ontogenesis, at the gene level. </hea
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