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SNP and haplotype mapping for genetic analysis in the rat.

Authors :
Saar K
Beck A
Bihoreau MT
Birney E
Brocklebank D
Chen Y
Cuppen E
Demonchy S
Dopazo J
Flicek P
Foglio M
Fujiyama A
Gut IG
Gauguier D
Guigo R
Guryev V
Heinig M
Hummel O
Jahn N
Klages S
Kren V
Kube M
Kuhl H
Kuramoto T
Kuroki Y
Lechner D
Lee YA
Lopez-Bigas N
Lathrop GM
Mashimo T
Medina I
Mott R
Patone G
Perrier-Cornet JA
Platzer M
Pravenec M
Reinhardt R
Sakaki Y
Schilhabel M
Schulz H
Serikawa T
Shikhagaie M
Tatsumoto S
Taudien S
Toyoda A
Voigt B
Zelenika D
Zimdahl H
Hubner N
Source :
Nature genetics [Nat Genet] 2008 May; Vol. 40 (5), pp. 560-6.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

The laboratory rat is one of the most extensively studied model organisms. Inbred laboratory rat strains originated from limited Rattus norvegicus founder populations, and the inherited genetic variation provides an excellent resource for the correlation of genotype to phenotype. Here, we report a survey of genetic variation based on almost 3 million newly identified SNPs. We obtained accurate and complete genotypes for a subset of 20,238 SNPs across 167 distinct inbred rat strains, two rat recombinant inbred panels and an F2 intercross. Using 81% of these SNPs, we constructed high-density genetic maps, creating a large dataset of fully characterized SNPs for disease gene mapping. Our data characterize the population structure and illustrate the degree of linkage disequilibrium. We provide a detailed SNP map and demonstrate its utility for mapping of quantitative trait loci. This community resource is openly available and augments the genetic tools for this workhorse of physiological studies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1546-1718
Volume :
40
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18443594
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.124