AI Article Synopsis

  • The study presents a detailed genetic map tracing the ancestry of most current laboratory mouse strains, showing they mainly descend from a few "fancy" mice with limited genetic variety.
  • It finds that these classical strains are predominantly of Mus musculus domesticus origin, with some influence from Japanese mice, highlighting their constrained genetic diversity.
  • In contrast, wild-derived laboratory strains showcase a wider genetic diversity and show evidence of interbreeding with other subspecies, influenced by contamination from existing lab stocks.

Article Abstract

Here we provide a genome-wide, high-resolution map of the phylogenetic origin of the genome of most extant laboratory mouse inbred strains. Our analysis is based on the genotypes of wild-caught mice from three subspecies of Mus musculus. We show that classical laboratory strains are derived from a few fancy mice with limited haplotype diversity. Their genomes are overwhelmingly Mus musculus domesticus in origin, and the remainder is mostly of Japanese origin. We generated genome-wide haplotype maps based on identity by descent from fancy mice and show that classical inbred strains have limited and non-randomly distributed genetic diversity. In contrast, wild-derived laboratory strains represent a broad sampling of diversity within M. musculus. Intersubspecific introgression is pervasive in these strains, and contamination by laboratory stocks has played a role in this process. The subspecific origin, haplotype diversity and identity by descent maps can be visualized using the Mouse Phylogeny Viewer (see URLs).

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3125408PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.847DOI Listing

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