A High-Resolution Microsatellite Map of the Mouse Genome
- Michael Rhodes1,
- Richard Straw1,
- Supem Fernando1,
- Andrew Evans1,
- Tregaye Lacey1,
- Andrew Dearlove1,
- John Greystrong1,
- Joanne Walker1,
- Paula Watson1,
- Paul Weston1,
- Maria Kelly1,
- Dilip Taylor1,
- Keith Gibson1,
- Chris Mundy1,
- Franck Bourgade2,
- Christophe Poirier2,
- Dominique Simon2,
- Ana Lucia Bueno Brunialti2,
- Xavier Montagutelli2,
- Jean-Louis Gu′enet2,
- Andy Haynes3, and
- Steve D.M. Brown3,4,5
Abstract
The European Collaborative Interspecific Backcross (EUCIB) resource was constructed for the purposes of high-resolution genetic mapping of the mouse genome (Breen et al. 1994). The large Mus spretus/C57BL/6 backcross of 982 progeny has a genetic resolution of 0.3 cM at the 95% confidence level (∼500 kb in the mouse genome). We have used the EUCIB mapping resource to develop a genome-wide high-resolution genetic map incorporating 3368 microsatellites. The microsatellites are distributed among 2302 genetically separated bins with 1.46 markers per bin on average. Average bin separation is 0.61 cM. This high-resolution genetic map will aid the construction of a robust physical map of the mouse genome.
Footnotes
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↵5 Corresponding author.
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E-MAIL s.brown{at}har.mrc.ac.uk; FAX 01235 824542.
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- Received August 4, 1997.
- Accepted February 9, 1998.
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press











