18th International Mouse Genome Conference17-22 October 2004, Seattle, USA
Plenary Presentations * Oral
Presentations * Poster
Abstracts * Photos
Verne Chapman Memorial Lecture * Table
of Contents * Attendees * Awards
97. MODULARITY OF PLEIOTROPIC
EFFECTS ON SKELETAL MORPHOLOGY
Kenney JP, Wong B, Pletscher LS, Cheverud JM
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University
School of Medicine, Saint Louis, MO, United States
98. SEQUENCES MEET BIOLOGY:
INTEGRATION OF SEQUENCES AS DATABASE OBJECTS IN MOUSE GENOME INFORMATICS
Corbani LE, Baldarelli RM, King BL, Cousins S, Beal
JS, Lewis J, Meiers DB, Walker MB, Kadin JA, Richardson JE,
Blake JA, Ringwald M, Eppig JT, Bult CJ
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, United States
99. IN SILICO
POSITIONAL CLONING: A WEB SYSTEM FOR EXPLORATION OF RESPONSIBLE GENES IN MONOGENIC
AND MULTIGENIC TRAITS
Toyoda TT, Masuya HM, Kawashima TK, Hasegawa YH,
Sezutsu HS, Kaminuma EK, Mochizuki YM, Hirosawa KH, Heida NH,
Gondo YG, Kawai JK, Wakana SW, Konagaya AK, Hayashizaki YH,
Shiroishi TS
RIKEN Genomic Sciences Center, Yokohama, Japan
100. COMPARISON AND
COMBINATION OF THREE MOUSE TISSUE-SPECIFIC MICROARRAY EXPRESSION DATA SETS
Morris QD 1, Zhang
W 2, Robinson MD 1, Frey
BJ 1, Hughes TR 2
1 Electrical and Computer Engineering, University
of Toronto, Toronto, Canada, 2 Banting and Best
Department of Medical Research, University of Toronto,
Toronto, Canada
101. QTL REAPER: DEFINING
QUANTITATIVE TRAIT LOCI WITH HERITABILITY-WEIGHTED MICROARRAY DATA
Manly KF, Wang J, Williams RW
University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN,
United States
102. THE MOUSE GENE
EXPRESSION DATABASE (GXD): INTEGRATED ACCESS TO EXPRESSION INFORMATION
FOR THE LABORATORY MOUSE
Begley DA, Eppig JT, Finger JH, Hayamizu TF, Hill DP,
Kadin JA, McCright IJ, Richardson JE, Smith CM, Ringwald M
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, United States
103. THE GENE ONTOLOGY
CONSORTIUM: BIO-ONTOLOGIES FOR GENOME ANNOTATIONS
Blake JA, Gene Ontology Consortium The
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, United States
104. SNPLAD; A SNP DISCOVERY
PIPELINE FOR IDENTIFYING CANDIDATE SNP IN PUBLIC EST TRACE FILES
Noyes HA, Amigo Lechuga J, Broadhead AM, Hughes M,
Morton IG, Rennie K, Kemp SJ
University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom
105. INTEGRATING MOUSE
SNPS INTO MGI: PLANS, PROGRESS, AND PROTOTYPES
Richardson JE, Blake JA, Bult CJ, Eppig JT, Kadin JA,
King BL, Ringwald M
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, United States
106. HIGH THROUGHPUT
YEAST TWO-HYBRID STRATEGIES FOR PROTEOME-WIDE PROTEIN-PROTEIN INTERACTION MAPS
Zhong J1, Finley
R 2
1 Current affiliation: Laboratory of Genetics,
National Institute on Aging, NIH,, Baltimore, MD, United
States, 2 Center for Molecular Medicine and
Genetics, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, United States
107. ASSEMBLING THE
MOUSE GENOME: WGS AND CLONE BASED METHODS
Church DM 1, Baily
JA 3, Eichler EE 2, Agarwala
R 1
1 NIH/NCBI, Bethesda, United States, 2
University of Washington, Seattle, United States,
3 Case Western Reserve University Medical School,
Cleveland, United States
108. MOUSE GENOME RESOURCES
AT NCBI
Church DM, Annotation Team NCBI
NIH/NCBI, Bethesda, United States
109. IN SILICO POSITIONAL
CANDIDATE GENE ANALYSIS IN THE MOUSE: NEW TOOLS FROM THE MOUSE GENOME INFORMATICS
CONSORTIUM
Bult CJ, Ringwald M, Blake JA, Kadin JA, Richardson
JE, Eppig JT, Sequences and Maps Group MGI, Phenotypes Group
MGI, Expression Group MGI, Software Group MGI
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, United States
110. COMPLEX BIOLOGICAL
SYSTEMS AND BIOINFORMATICS: SOME NEW BIOINFORMATICS TOOLS AND APPROACHES
Snoddy J
GST at Oak Ridge National Lab and University of Tennessee,
Oak Ridge, United States
111. THE UTILITY OF
HIGH-DENSITY GENETIC MAPS IN EXPERIMENTAL MOUSE CROSSES
Leonardson AS, Edwards SW, Cervino ACL, Schadt
EE
rosetta/merck, seattle, United States
112. MOUSE PHENOME PROJECT
Bogue MA, Grubb SC
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine, United States
113. GENETIC ANALYSIS
OF GENE EXPRESSION IN MOUSE CNS REVEALS MAJOR PLEIOTROPIC AND POLYGENIC CONTROL
OF SYNAPTIC MACHINERY
Chesler EJ 1, Baldwin
NE 2, Zhang B 3, Kirov
S 3, Wang J 1, Lu
L 1, Snoddy JR 3, Langston M
A 2, Manly K F 1, Williams R
W 1
1 Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics,
University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN,
United States, 2 Department of Computer Science,
University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, United States,
3 Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN,
United States
114. A MUTATION IN THE
SERUM AND GLUCOCORTICOID-INDUCIBLE KINASE-LIKE KINASE (SGKL) GENE IS
RESPONSIBLE FOR DEFECTIVE HAIR GROWTH IN MICE
Masujin K 1, Okada
T 2, Izawa N 1, Tuji
T 1, Ishii Y 2, Takano
K 3, Matsuda J 3, Ogura
A 4, Kunieda T 1
1 Graduate School of Natural Science and
Technology, Okayama University, Okayama, Japan, 2
Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The
University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, 3 National
Institute of Infectious diseases, Tokyo, Japan, 4
RIKEN Bioresource Center, Ibaraki, Japan
115. MOUSE CHROMOSOME
11 ANALYSIS AND ANNOTATION: THE HIGHLIGHTS
Ashurst J, Frankish A, Gibson R, Grocock R, Hart L, Laird G,
Loveland J, Mudge J, Sehra H, Steward C, Swarbreck D,
Wilming L
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Hinxton, United Kingdom
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