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1274 Full-Open Reading Frames of Transcripts Expressed in the Developing Mouse Nervous System
Author(s) -
Maria F. Bonaldo,
Thomas Bair,
Todd E. Scheetz,
Einat Snir,
Ike Akabogu,
Jennifer Bair,
Brian Berger,
Keith Crouch,
A.S. Davis,
Mari E. Eyestone,
Catherine R. Keppel,
Tamara A. Kucaba,
Mark Lebeck,
Jenny Lin,
Anna Izabel R Melo,
Joshua Rehmann,
Rebecca S. Reiter,
Kelly Schaefer,
Christina Smith,
Dylan Tack,
Kurtis Trout,
Val C. Sheffield,
J J-C Lin,
Thomas L. Casavant,
Marcelo B. Soares
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.2601304
Subject(s) - open reading frame , biology , cdna library , complementary dna , clone (java method) , genetics , gene , encode , expressed sequence tag , microbiology and biotechnology , computational biology , peptide sequence
As part of the trans-National Institutes of Health (NIH) Mouse Brain Molecular Anatomy Project (BMAP), and in close coordination with the NIH Mammalian Gene Collection Program (MGC), we initiated a large-scale project to clone, identify, and sequence the complete open reading frame (ORF) of transcripts expressed in the developing mouse nervous system. Here we report the analysis of the ORF sequence of 1274 cDNAs, obtained from 47 full-length-enriched cDNA libraries, constructed by using a novel approach, herein described. cDNA libraries were derived from size-fractionated cytoplasmic mRNA isolated from brain and eye tissues obtained at several embryonic stages and postnatal days. Altogether, including the full-ORF MGC sequences derived from these libraries by the MGC sequencing team, NIH_BMAP full-ORF sequences correspond to approximately 20% of all transcripts currently represented in mouse MGC. We show that NIH_BMAP clones comprise 68% of mouse MGC cDNAs > or =5 kb, and 54% of those > or =4 kb, as of March 15, 2004. Importantly, we identified transcripts, among the 1274 full-ORF sequences, that are exclusively or predominantly expressed in brain and eye tissues, many of which encode yet uncharacterized proteins.

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