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A physical map of the mouse genome

Authors :
Asif T. Chinwalla
Daniel A. Russell
Richard D. Hutton
Rebecca McGrane
Pawan Pandoh
Catharine Gray
Margaret Krol
Kazutoyo Osoegawa
Mandeep Sekhon
Ewan Birney
Marco A. Marra
Michael Heaney
Reta Kutsche
R Evans
Pieter J. de Jong
Soo Sen Lee
Tony Cox
Elizabeth Gebregeorgis
Carol Scott
Jacqueline E. Schein
Duane E Smailus
David R. Bentley
Parvaneh Saeedi
Glen Threadgold
Ian R Mullenger
Suganthi Chittaranjan
Chris Fjell
Robert H. Waterston
Jim Stalker
Letticia Hsiao
Jason Maas
Martin Krzywinski
Jason Carter
John Douglas Mcpherson
Kelly Mead
Simon G. Gregory
Ian Bosdet
Bola Ayodeji
Anna-Liisa Prabhu
Joel A. Malek
George S. Yang
Dan Layman
Tony Gaige
Keita Geer
Jane Rogers
Tamara Feldblyum
Miranda Tsai
Larry Overton
Sara Jaeger
LaDeana W. Hillier
Kristine M. Wylie
Colin Kremitzki
Sheryl Taylor
Carrie Mathewson
Jyoti Shetty
Wesley Terpstra
James Smith
Getahun Tsegaye
Christopher A Fox
Steve Messervier
Natasja Wye
Candice McLeavy
Jill Vardy
William C. Nierman
Lorraine Spence
Alla Shvartsbeyn
Sofiya Shatsman
Readman Chiu
Claire M. Fraser
Michael Smith
John W. Wallis
Michael C. Holmes
Tim Hubbard
Ran Guin
Shaying Zhao
Jeffrey L Stott
Noreen Girn
Kimbly J Phillips
Rebecca S. Walker
Paul W. Burridge
Joseph J. Catanese
Steven J.M. Jones
Steven R. Ness
Dan Fuhrmann
Susanna Chan
Jennifer Asano
Source :
Nature. 418(6899)
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

A physical map of a genome is an essential guide for navigation, allowing the location of any gene or other landmark in the chromosomal DNA. We have constructed a physical map of the mouse genome that contains 296 contigs of overlapping bacterial clones and 16,992 unique markers. The mouse contigs were aligned to the human genome sequence on the basis of 51,486 homology matches, thus enabling use of the conserved synteny (correspondence between chromosome blocks) of the two genomes to accelerate construction of the mouse map. The map provides a framework for assembly of whole-genome shotgun sequence data, and a tile path of clones for generation of the reference sequence. Definition of the human-mouse alignment at this level of resolution enables identification of a mouse clone that corresponds to almost any position in the human genome. The human sequence may be used to facilitate construction of other mammalian genome maps using the same strategy.

Details

ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
418
Issue :
6899
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....508dd38733be28e60306eb0bc6ed6d17