Model organism/Bibliography: Difference between revisions

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imported>Supten Sarbadhikari
(New page: {{subpages}} * [http://developmentalbiology.de/en/modelorganisms.php Model organisms of developmental biology])
 
imported>Daniel Mietchen
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* [http://developmentalbiology.de/en/modelorganisms.php Model organisms of developmental biology]
== Books ==
* [[Jim Endersby]]: ''A Guinea Pig's History of Biology'', Heinemann, 2007
 
== Journal articles ==
 
*{{CZ:Ref:Bohland 2009 A proposal for a coordinated effort for the determination of brainwide neuroanatomical connectivity in model organisms at a mesoscopic scale}}
*{{CZ:Ref:Lein 2007 Genome-wide atlas of gene expression in the adult mouse brain}}
*{{CZ:Ref:Santini 2002 Phylogeny, fossils, and model systems in the study of evolutionary developmental biology}}
*{{CZ:Ref:Ballatori 2002 Defining the Molecular and Cellular Basis of Toxicity Using Comparative Models}}
*{{CZ:Ref:Bolker 1995 Model systems in developmental biology}}
*{{CZ:Ref:Krebs 1975 The August Krogh principle: "For many problems there is an animal on which it can be most conveniently studied"}}

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A list of key readings about Model organism.
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Books

  • Jim Endersby: A Guinea Pig's History of Biology, Heinemann, 2007

Journal articles

Suggests a framework for the study of the brain in model organisms at a mesoscopic scale, i.e. at length scales between the microscopic (≤ 100μm) and macroscopic (≥ several mm) levels. Based on the experience with the impact of wide-spread data sharing in other scientific disciplines (e.g. genomics), the criteria for a centralized knowledge repository on mesoscopic aspects of the brain in the rat, the macaque and humans are laid out.
Provides a brief description of The Allen Brain Atlas of the adult mouse brain (strain C57BL/6J) - "a genome-scale collection of cellular resolution gene expression profiles using in situ hybridization" of over 20,000 genes (i.e. most mouse genes then known to encode proteins). Also reports that "approximately 80% of total genes assayed display some cellular expression above background in the brain."