Inbred or Outbred? Genetic Diversity in Laboratory Rodent Colonies

Nonmodel rodents are widely used as subjects for both basic and applied biological research, but the genetic diversity of the study individuals is rarely quantified. University-housed colonies tend to be small and subject to founder effects and genetic drift; so they may be highly inbred or show sub...

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Main Authors: Thomas D. Brekke, Katherine A. Steele, John F. Mulley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2018-02-01
Series:G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://g3journal.org/lookup/doi/10.1534/g3.117.300495
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spelling doaj-8f7068e06a9845a587fb4156f27b3a102021-07-02T03:09:07ZengOxford University PressG3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics2160-18362018-02-018267968610.1534/g3.117.30049527Inbred or Outbred? Genetic Diversity in Laboratory Rodent ColoniesThomas D. BrekkeKatherine A. SteeleJohn F. MulleyNonmodel rodents are widely used as subjects for both basic and applied biological research, but the genetic diversity of the study individuals is rarely quantified. University-housed colonies tend to be small and subject to founder effects and genetic drift; so they may be highly inbred or show substantial genetic divergence from other colonies, even those derived from the same source. Disregard for the levels of genetic diversity in an animal colony may result in a failure to replicate results if a different colony is used to repeat an experiment, as different colonies may have fixed alternative variants. Here we use high throughput sequencing to demonstrate genetic divergence in three isolated colonies of Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) even though they were all established recently from the same source. We also show that genetic diversity in allegedly “outbred” colonies of nonmodel rodents (gerbils, hamsters, house mice, deer mice, and rats) varies considerably from nearly no segregating diversity to very high levels of polymorphism. We conclude that genetic divergence in isolated colonies may play an important role in the “replication crisis.” In a more positive light, divergent rodent colonies represent an opportunity to leverage genetically distinct individuals in genetic crossing experiments. In sum, awareness of the genetic diversity of an animal colony is paramount as it allows researchers to properly replicate experiments and also to capitalize on other genetically distinct individuals to explore the genetic basis of a trait.http://g3journal.org/lookup/doi/10.1534/g3.117.300495Merionesgenetic diversityinbreedinglaboratory rodentsreplication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas D. Brekke
Katherine A. Steele
John F. Mulley
spellingShingle Thomas D. Brekke
Katherine A. Steele
John F. Mulley
Inbred or Outbred? Genetic Diversity in Laboratory Rodent Colonies
G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
Meriones
genetic diversity
inbreeding
laboratory rodents
replication
author_facet Thomas D. Brekke
Katherine A. Steele
John F. Mulley
author_sort Thomas D. Brekke
title Inbred or Outbred? Genetic Diversity in Laboratory Rodent Colonies
title_short Inbred or Outbred? Genetic Diversity in Laboratory Rodent Colonies
title_full Inbred or Outbred? Genetic Diversity in Laboratory Rodent Colonies
title_fullStr Inbred or Outbred? Genetic Diversity in Laboratory Rodent Colonies
title_full_unstemmed Inbred or Outbred? Genetic Diversity in Laboratory Rodent Colonies
title_sort inbred or outbred? genetic diversity in laboratory rodent colonies
publisher Oxford University Press
series G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
issn 2160-1836
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Nonmodel rodents are widely used as subjects for both basic and applied biological research, but the genetic diversity of the study individuals is rarely quantified. University-housed colonies tend to be small and subject to founder effects and genetic drift; so they may be highly inbred or show substantial genetic divergence from other colonies, even those derived from the same source. Disregard for the levels of genetic diversity in an animal colony may result in a failure to replicate results if a different colony is used to repeat an experiment, as different colonies may have fixed alternative variants. Here we use high throughput sequencing to demonstrate genetic divergence in three isolated colonies of Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) even though they were all established recently from the same source. We also show that genetic diversity in allegedly “outbred” colonies of nonmodel rodents (gerbils, hamsters, house mice, deer mice, and rats) varies considerably from nearly no segregating diversity to very high levels of polymorphism. We conclude that genetic divergence in isolated colonies may play an important role in the “replication crisis.” In a more positive light, divergent rodent colonies represent an opportunity to leverage genetically distinct individuals in genetic crossing experiments. In sum, awareness of the genetic diversity of an animal colony is paramount as it allows researchers to properly replicate experiments and also to capitalize on other genetically distinct individuals to explore the genetic basis of a trait.
topic Meriones
genetic diversity
inbreeding
laboratory rodents
replication
url http://g3journal.org/lookup/doi/10.1534/g3.117.300495
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