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    Annu Rev Genet. 2002;36:657-86. Epub 2002 Jun 11.

    The Feline Genome Project.

    O'Brien SJ, Menotti-Raymond M, Murphy WJ, Yuhki N.

    Laboratory of Genomic Diversity, National Cancer Institute-Frederick, Frederick, Maryland 21702-1201, USA. OBRIEN@ncifcrf.gov

    The compilation of a dense gene map and eventually a whole genome sequence (WGS) of the domestic cat holds considerable value for human genome annotation, for veterinary medicine, and for insight into the evolution of genome organization among mammals. Human association and veterinary studies of the cat, its domestic breeds, and its charismatic wild relatives of the family Felidae have rendered the species a powerful model for human hereditary diseases, for infectious disease agents, for adaptive evolutionary divergence, for conservation genetics, and for forensic applications. Here we review the advantages, rationale, and present strategy of a feline genome project, and we describe the disease models, comparative genomics, and biological applications posed by the full resolution of the cat's genome.

    PMID: 12359739 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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