The Collaborative Cross at Oak Ridge National Laboratory: developing a powerful resource for systems genetics.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2008
Keywords
Biological-Specimen-Banks, Breeding, Crosses-Genetic, Genotype, Inheritance-Patterns, Laboratories, Litter-Size, Mice-Inbred-Strains, Phenotype, Program-Development, Tennessee
First Page
382
Last Page
389
JAX Source
Mamm Genome 2008 Jun; 19(6):382-9.
Abstract
Complex traits and disease comorbidity in humans and in model organisms are the result of naturally occurring polymorphisms that interact with each other and with the environment. To ensure the availability of resources needed to investigate biomolecular networks and systems-level phenotypes underlying complex traits, we have initiated breeding of a new genetic reference population of mice, the Collaborative Cross. This population has been designed to optimally support systems genetics analysis. Its novel and important features include a high level of genetic diversity, a large population size to ensure sufficient power in high-dimensional studies, and high mapping precision through accumulation of independent recombination events. Implementation of the Collaborative Cross has been ongoing at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) since May 2005. Production has been systematically managed using a software-assisted breeding program with fully traceable lineages, performed in a controlled environment. Currently, there are 650 lines in production, and close to 200 lines are now beyond their seventh generation of inbreeding. Retired breeders enter a high-throughput phenotyping protocol and DNA samples are banked for analyses of recombination history, allele drift and loss, and population structure. Herein we present a progress report of the Collaborative Cross breeding program at ORNL and a description of the kinds of investigations that this resource will support.
Recommended Citation
Chesler EJ,
Miller DR,
Branstetter LR,
Galloway LD,
Jackson BL,
Philip VM,
Voy BH,
Culiat CT,
Threadgill DW,
Williams RW,
Churchill GA,
Johnson DK,
Manly KF.
The Collaborative Cross at Oak Ridge National Laboratory: developing a powerful resource for systems genetics. Mamm Genome 2008 Jun; 19(6):382-9.