Background: Model organisms have contributed substantially to our understanding of the etiology of human disease as well as having assisted with the development of new treatment modalities. The availability of the human, mouse and, most recently, the rat genome sequences now permit the comprehensive investigation of the rodent orthologs of genes associated with human disease. Here, we investigate whether human disease genes differ significantly from their rodent orthologs with respect to their overall levels of conservation and their rates of evolutionary change./nResults: Human disease genes are unevenly distributed among human chromosomes and are highly represented (99.5%) among human-rodent ortholog sets. Differences are revealed in evol...
To take full advantage of the mouse as a model organism, it is essential to distinguish lineage-spec...
The rat is an important system for modeling human disease. Four years ago, the rich 150-year history...
More than a thousand quantitative trait loci (QTLs) relevant to many aspects of complex human diseas...
Background: Model organisms have contributed substantially to our understanding of the etiology of h...
<div><p></p><p>Understanding the core set of genes that are necessary for basic developmental functi...
Abstract Background With the completion of the whole genome sequence for many organisms, investigati...
Amino acid tandem repeats, also called homopolymeric tracts, are extremely abundant in eukaryotic pr...
The abundance and dynamics of copy number variants (CNVs) in mammalian genomes poses new challenges ...
Understanding the core set of genes that are necessary for basic developmental functions is one of t...
We present an analysis of rates and patterns of microevolutionary phenomena that have shaped the hum...
The laboratory rat has been used for a long time as the model of choice in several biomedical discip...
Understanding how genetic variation affects organism phenotype and fitness is a fundamental question...
The abundance and dynamics of copy number variants (CNVs) in mammalian genomes poses new challenges ...
The rat is an important system for modeling human disease. Four years ago, the rich 150-year history...
Large numbers of inbred laboratory rat strains have been developed for a range of complex disease ph...
To take full advantage of the mouse as a model organism, it is essential to distinguish lineage-spec...
The rat is an important system for modeling human disease. Four years ago, the rich 150-year history...
More than a thousand quantitative trait loci (QTLs) relevant to many aspects of complex human diseas...
Background: Model organisms have contributed substantially to our understanding of the etiology of h...
<div><p></p><p>Understanding the core set of genes that are necessary for basic developmental functi...
Abstract Background With the completion of the whole genome sequence for many organisms, investigati...
Amino acid tandem repeats, also called homopolymeric tracts, are extremely abundant in eukaryotic pr...
The abundance and dynamics of copy number variants (CNVs) in mammalian genomes poses new challenges ...
Understanding the core set of genes that are necessary for basic developmental functions is one of t...
We present an analysis of rates and patterns of microevolutionary phenomena that have shaped the hum...
The laboratory rat has been used for a long time as the model of choice in several biomedical discip...
Understanding how genetic variation affects organism phenotype and fitness is a fundamental question...
The abundance and dynamics of copy number variants (CNVs) in mammalian genomes poses new challenges ...
The rat is an important system for modeling human disease. Four years ago, the rich 150-year history...
Large numbers of inbred laboratory rat strains have been developed for a range of complex disease ph...
To take full advantage of the mouse as a model organism, it is essential to distinguish lineage-spec...
The rat is an important system for modeling human disease. Four years ago, the rich 150-year history...
More than a thousand quantitative trait loci (QTLs) relevant to many aspects of complex human diseas...