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- Guidelines for Nomenclature of Mouse and Rat Strains
Production of inbred strains means that these backgrounds can be defined and thus require nomenclature conventions It should be borne in mind that genetic drift means that there may still be unknown genetic differences between individuals within strains
- International Committee on Standardized Genetic Nomenclature for Mice
These rewritten guidelines reflect this collaboration, in addition to documenting new and revised rules for the naming of strains This document is updated annually by the international
- RGD: Rules for Nomenclature of Mouse and Rat Strains
Strains can be termed inbred if they have been mated brother x sister for 20 or more consecutive generations, and individuals of the strain can be traced to a single ancestral pair at the 20 th or subsequent generation
- Inbred Strain - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
By definition of The International Committe on Standardized Genetic Nomenclature for Mice and The Rat Genome nomenclature Committe, an inbred strain is produced by systematically mating brother to sister for 20 or more generations
- Nomenclature for Mouse Strains - The Jackson Laboratory
JAX provides you comprehensive resources to understand appropriate nomenclature for mouse strains including inbred, substrains, transgenics, knockouts, hybrids and more
- Standard Nomenclature of Mouse and Rat Strains - Springer
Comprehensive guidelines for naming Recombinant Inbred (RI), Collaborative Cross (CC), Recombinant Congenic (RC), Consomic and Conplastic strains can be accessed in the Guidelines for Nomenclature of Mouse and Rat Strains on the MGI webpage
- 2 Nomenclature - Springer
Official rules for nomenclature of inbred strains of mice are now controlled by the 'Committee on Standardised Genetic Nomenclature for Mice' which works under the auspices of the International Committee on Laboratory Animals
- 3. 4 STANDARDIZED NOMENCLATURE - The Jackson Laboratory
Here, I will briefly review the salient features of this nomenclature system with a focus on the naming of newly defined genes and loci
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