BXD Brain mRNA U74Av2 Database About the mice used to map microarray data: The set of animals used for mapping (a mapping panel) consists of 30 groups of genetically uniform mice of the BXD type. The parental strains are C57BL/6J (B6 or B) and DBA/2J (D2 or D). The first generation hybrid is labeled F1. The F1 hybrids were made by crossing B6 females to D2 males. All other lines are recombinant inbred strains derived from C57BL/6J and DBA/2J crosses. BXD2 through BXD32 were produced by Dr. Benjamin Taylor starting in the late 1970s. BXD33 through BXD42 were also produced by Dr. Taylor, but they were generated in the 1990s. Lines BXDA12 and BXDA20 are two partially inbred advanced recombinant strains (F8 and F9) that are part of a large set of BXD-Advanced strains being produced by Drs. Robert Williams, Lu Lu, Guomin Zhou, Lee Silver, and Jeremy Peirce. There will eventually be ~45 of these strains. For additional background on recombinant inbred strains, please see http://www.nervenet.org/papers/bxn.html. The table below lists the arrays by strain, sex, and age. Each array was hybridized to a pool of mRNA from 3 mice. Selecting on the Male or Female symbols in the table below will link you to data on the quality of the individual microarrays.
About the tissue used to generate these data:
About data processing: Probe (cell) level data from the .CEL file: These .CEL values produced by MAS 5.0 are the 75% quantiles from a set of 36 pixel values per cell (the pixel with the 12th highest value represents the whole cell). About the chromosome and megabase position values: The chromosomal locations of probe sets and gene markers were determined by BLAT analysis using the Mouse Genome Sequencing Consortium Feb 2002 Assembly (see http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgBlat?command=start&org=mouse). We thank John Hogenesch (GNF) and Rob Edwards (UTHSC) for help in extracting and generating these position data. Resolving Gene Identify and Position Problems: Users should confirm the identity and positions of probe sets. Probe sets that are intended to target transcripts from a single gene occasionally map to different chromosomes; for example, two probe sets supposedly target the thyroid hormone alpha receptor (Thra): probe sets 99076_at and 99077_at map to Chr 14 at 13.556 Mb and Chr 11 at 99.537 Mb, respectively. One of these must be wrong and since Thra maps to Chr 11 rather than Chr 14, it is likely that 99076_at is mismapped or mislabeled as Thra. To determine which problem is more likely, please re-BLAT the perfect match probe sequence. This is usually quite simple. Just paste all of the perfect match probes into a single BLAT query. For example, to test probe set 99076, paste this sequence into the BLAT query window: GTTAG ACTTT TTCAT CTGCC AAGTC TTTAG TAAGT GACCT ACCTA CAGGG TGACC TACCT ACAGG CTTAG AGATT ACCTA CAGGC TTAGA GATCA TGGTA AGATT CATGA ACAAC ACCCC GTGCA GATTC ATGAA CAACA CCCCG TGCCG TAACG ACATT AAGAA CCTGC TTTAT AACTT GTTGC TACAG GATTT GAACC AGGAT TTGAA CTTCT GTGGT ACAGA CTTCT GTGGT ACAGT TAGGA GAGCC TTCTG TGGTA CAGTT AGGAG AGCTG GTGTG TCTGT CATTC AGTAG GGACC TGTCA TTCAG TAGGG ACCAT AACTC TGTCA TTCAG TAGGG ACCAT AACTA TTCAG TAGGG ACCAT AACTG CTGCG CTTAC GTTCA GTGGG TATGG CTTTG TGAAT TCTTT ACATG ATAGC ATTC (NOTE: BLAT is insensitive to sequence overlap and extra spaces. The sequence above is a concatenation of all PM probes without any concern for probe overlap. The Perfect Match sequences are available on WebQTL by selecting the link� on� the Trait Data and Editing window). This will return this BLAT Search Results This confirms that the probe set maps to Chr 14 (a score of 219 is good). However if you click on the browser link in the BLAT Search Results window you will see that the gene that these probes target is actually BC008556 (a nuclear receptor subfamily 1, group D, member 2 gene), not Thra. The Chr 19 hit with a score of 171 can be discounted since it does not correspond to a known transcript. Data source acknowledgment:
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