Genetic dissection of a behavioral quantitative trait locus shows that Rgs2 modulates anxiety in mice
- PMID: 15489855
- DOI: 10.1038/ng1450
Genetic dissection of a behavioral quantitative trait locus shows that Rgs2 modulates anxiety in mice
Abstract
Here we present a strategy to determine the genetic basis of variance in complex phenotypes that arise from natural, as opposed to induced, genetic variation in mice. We show that a commercially available strain of outbred mice, MF1, can be treated as an ultrafine mosaic of standard inbred strains and accordingly used to dissect a known quantitative trait locus influencing anxiety. We also show that this locus can be subdivided into three regions, one of which contains Rgs2, which encodes a regulator of G protein signaling. We then use quantitative complementation to show that Rgs2 is a quantitative trait gene. This combined genetic and functional approach should be applicable to the analysis of any quantitative trait.
Comment in
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Complementing complexity.Nat Genet. 2004 Nov;36(11):1145-7. doi: 10.1038/ng1104-1145. Nat Genet. 2004. PMID: 15514665 No abstract available.
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