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Publication : Second-generation high-throughput forward genetic screen in mice to isolate subtle behavioral mutants.

First Author  Kumar V Year  2011
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  108 Suppl 3
Pages  15557-64 PubMed ID  21896739
Mgi Jnum  J:177774 Mgi Id  MGI:5296264
Doi  10.1073/pnas.1107726108 Citation  Kumar V, et al. (2011) Second-generation high-throughput forward genetic screen in mice to isolate subtle behavioral mutants. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 108 Suppl 3:15557-64
abstractText  Forward genetic screens have been highly successful in revealing roles of genes and pathways in complex biological events. Traditionally these screens have focused on isolating mutants with the greatest phenotypic deviance, with the hopes of discovering genes that are central to the biological event being investigated. Behavioral screens in mice typically use simple activity-based assays as endophenotypes for more complex emotional states of the animal. They generally set the selection threshold for a putative mutant at 3 SDs (z score of 3) from the average behavior of normal animals to minimize false-positive results. Behavioral screens using a high threshold for detection have generally had limited success, with high false-positive rates and subtle phenotypic differences that have made mapping and cloning difficult. In addition, targeted reverse genetic approaches have shown that when genes central to behaviors such as open field behavior, psychostimulant response, and learning and memory tasks are mutated, they produce subtle phenotypes that differ from wild-type animals by 1 to 2 SDs (z scores of 1 to 2). We have conducted a second-generation (G2) dominant N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU) screen especially designed to detect subtle behavioral mutants for open field activity and psychostimulant response behaviors. We successfully detect mutant lines with only 1 to 2 SD shifts in mean response compared with wild-type control animals and present a robust statistical and methodological framework for conducting such forward genetic screens. Using this methodology we have screened 229 ENU mutant lines and have identified 15 heritable mutant lines. We conclude that for screens in mice that use activity-based endophenotypic measurements for complex behavioral states, this G2 screening approach yields better results.
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