| Literature DB >> 26684931 |
Andrew P Morgan1, Chen-Ping Fu2, Chia-Yu Kao2, Catherine E Welsh3, John P Didion1, Liran Yadgary1, Leeanna Hyacinth1, Martin T Ferris1, Timothy A Bell1, Darla R Miller1, Paola Giusti-Rodriguez1, Randal J Nonneman1, Kevin D Cook1, Jason K Whitmire1, Lisa E Gralinski4, Mark Keller5, Alan D Attie5, Gary A Churchill6, Petko Petkov6, Patrick F Sullivan7, Jennifer R Brennan8, Leonard McMillan2, Fernando Pardo-Manuel de Villena9.
Abstract
Genotyping microarrays are an important resource for genetic mapping, population genetics, and monitoring of the genetic integrity of laboratory stocks. We have developed the third generation of the Mouse Universal Genotyping Array (MUGA) series, GigaMUGA, a 143,259-probe Illumina Infinium II array for the house mouse (Mus musculus). The bulk of the content of GigaMUGA is optimized for genetic mapping in the Collaborative Cross and Diversity Outbred populations, and for substrain-level identification of laboratory mice. In addition to 141,090 single nucleotide polymorphism probes, GigaMUGA contains 2006 probes for copy number concentrated in structurally polymorphic regions of the mouse genome. The performance of the array is characterized in a set of 500 high-quality reference samples spanning laboratory inbred strains, recombinant inbred lines, outbred stocks, and wild-caught mice. GigaMUGA is highly informative across a wide range of genetically diverse samples, from laboratory substrains to other Mus species. In addition to describing the content and performance of the array, we provide detailed probe-level annotation and recommendations for quality control.Entities:
Keywords: genetic mapping; inbred strains; microarrays
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26684931 PMCID: PMC4751547 DOI: 10.1534/g3.115.022087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.154