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Maria Breen, Lisa Deakln, Bernard Macdonald, Steve Miller, Ross Sibson, Emma Tarttelln, Philip Avner, Franck Bourgade, Jean-Louis Guenet, Xavler Montagutelli, Christophe Polrier, Dominique Simon, Dillp Tailor, Martin Bishop, Maria Kelly, Francis Rysavy, Sohaila Rastan, Dominic Norris, David Shepherd, Cathy Abbott, Alison Pllz, Sarah Hodge, Ian Jackson, Yvonne Boyd, Helen Blair, Gareth Maslen, John A.Todd, Peter W.Reed, Jonathan Stoye, Alan Ashworth, Linda McCarthy, Roger Cox, Leo Schalkwyk, Hans Lehrach, Joachim Klose, Uma Gangadharan, Steve Brown, Towards high resolution maps of the mouse and human genomes—a facility for ordering markers to 0.1 cM resolution, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 3, Issue 4, April 1994, Pages 621–627, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/3.4.621
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Abstract
982 progeny produced by a mouse Interspecific backcross between C57BL/6 and Mus spretus have been scored for at least 3 markers on each chromosome, completing an anchor map of 78 loci across the mouse genome. The anchor mapping identifies all the available recomblnants in each interanchor Interval allowing access to panels of mice that can be used for the high resolution mapping of any chromosome region. The large number of progeny recovered and scored from the Interspecific backcross allows us to resolve genetically markers that lie on average 200 kb apart on mouse chromosomes and within the cloning capacity of currently available YAC libraries. EUCIB provides the first genetic mapping resource specifically designed for the high resolution mapping of all regions of the mouse genome and will underpin the global physical mapping of the mouse genome. In addition, with the use of conserved sequences the facility is applicable to the high resolution comparative mapping of the mouse and human genomes. A new database has been implemented to support the computation of high resolution and ordered genetic maps.