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The development of innovative molecular techniques such as
pulse-field gel electro phoresis, cDNA subtraction libraries and
chromosome hopping libraries coupled with the increasing popularity
in the prospect of sequencing mammalian genomes, has triggered a
resurgence of interest in finding and characterizing genes that
playa role in modifying immune processes and diseases. Genetically
defined strains of mice (e. g., inbred strains and recently derived
stocks of wild mice) provide ideal models for examining the genetic
control of diseases as a result of their syntenic relationship with
man in genetic composition as well as linkage conserva tion. Due to
the relative ease of producing a specific genotype via appropriate
breeding schedules, murine models may provide the only hope for
unravelling those complex disease processes under mUltigenic
control. This issue of CTMI is a collection of papers on the
characterization and mapping of genes involved in mutations and
dysregulated immune responses which produce disease phenotypes.
These papers were presented at a workshop which was devoted to
examining reverse genetic approaches at localizing, cloning and
characterizing genes involved in a variety of developmental,
autoimmune, neoplastic and infectious disease processes. In the
first of three sections, a series of papers outline the most
currently used methods of mapping and isolating genes whose
products are unknown. The papers, following, are devoted to
specific gene systems whose dysregulation is likely to produce
mutant or disease phenotypes."
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