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The Jackson Laboratory

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Articles 61 - 62 of 62

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Facial Shape And Allometry Quantitative Trait Locus Intervals In The Diversity Outbred Mouse Are Enriched For Known Skeletal And Facial Development Genes., David C Katz, J David Aponte, Wei Liu, Rebecca M Green, Jessica M Mayeux, K Michael Pollard, Daniel Pomp, Steven C. Munger, Stephen A Murray, Charles C Roseman, Christopher J Percival, James Cheverud, Ralph S Marcucio, Benedikt Hallgrímsson Jun 2020

Facial Shape And Allometry Quantitative Trait Locus Intervals In The Diversity Outbred Mouse Are Enriched For Known Skeletal And Facial Development Genes., David C Katz, J David Aponte, Wei Liu, Rebecca M Green, Jessica M Mayeux, K Michael Pollard, Daniel Pomp, Steven C. Munger, Stephen A Murray, Charles C Roseman, Christopher J Percival, James Cheverud, Ralph S Marcucio, Benedikt Hallgrímsson

Faculty Research 2020

The biology of how faces are built and come to differ from one another is complex. Discovering normal variants that contribute to differences in facial morphology is one key to untangling this complexity, with important implications for medicine and evolutionary biology. This study maps quantitative trait loci (QTL) for skeletal facial shape using Diversity Outbred (DO) mice. The DO is a randomly outcrossed population with high heterozygosity that captures the allelic diversity of eight inbred mouse lines from three subspecies. The study uses a sample of 1147 DO animals (the largest sample yet employed for a shape QTL study in …


Covid-19 Preclinical Models: Human Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 Transgenic Mice., Cathleen Lutz, Leigh Maher, Charles Lee, Wonyoung Kang Jun 2020

Covid-19 Preclinical Models: Human Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 Transgenic Mice., Cathleen Lutz, Leigh Maher, Charles Lee, Wonyoung Kang

Faculty Research 2020

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a declared pandemic that is spreading all over the world at a dreadfully fast rate. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2), the pathogen of COVID-19, infects the human body using angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) as a receptor identical to the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) pandemic that occurred in 2002-2003. SARS-CoV-2 has a higher binding affinity to human ACE2 than to that of other species. Animal models that mimic the human disease are highly essential to develop therapeutics and vaccines against COVID-19. Here, we review transgenic mice that express human ACE2 in the airway and …