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Dive into the research topics where Robert G. Steen is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert G. Steen.


Nature Genetics | 1994

A genetic map of the mouse with 4,006 simple sequence length polymorphisms.

William F. Dietrich; Joyce Miller; Robert G. Steen; Mark Merchant; Deborah Damron; Robert Nahf; Alec Gross; Diane C. Joyce; Michael Wessel; Robert Dredge; Andre Marquis; Lincoln Stein; Nathan Goodman; David C. Page; Eric S. Lander

We have constructed a genetic map of the mouse genome containing 4,006 simple sequence length polymorphims (SSLPs). The map provides an average spacing of 0.35 centiMorgans (cM) between markers, corresponding to about 750 kb. Approximately 90% of the genome lies within 1.1 cM of a marker and 99% lies within 2.2 cM. The markers have an average polymorphism rate of 50% in crosses between laboratory strains. The markers are distributed in a relatively uniform fashion across the genome, although some deviations from randomness can be detected. In particular, there is a significant underrepresentation of markers on the X chromosome. This map represents the two–thirds point toward our goal of developing a mouse genetic map containing 6,000 SSLPs.


Science | 1996

Genetic Susceptibility to Leishmania: IL-12 Responsiveness in TH1 Cell Development

Mehmet L. Güler; James D. Gorham; Chyi-Song Hsieh; Aaron J. Mackey; Robert G. Steen; William F. Dietrich; Kenneth M. Murphy

The genetic background of T lymphocytes influences development of the T helper (TH) phenotype, resulting in either resistance or susceptibility of certain mouse strains to pathogens such as Leishmania major. With an in vitro model system, a difference in maintenance of responsiveness of T cells to interleukin-12 (IL-12) was detected between BALB/c and B10.D2 mice. Although naïve T cells from both strains initially responded to IL-12, BALB/c T cells lost IL-12 responsiveness after stimulation with antigen in vitro, even when cocultured with B10.D2 T cells. Thus, susceptibility of BALB/c mice to infection with L. major may derive from the loss of the ability to generate IL-12-induced TH1 responses rather than from an IL-4-induced TH2 response.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Radiation hybrid map of the mouse genome.

William J. Van Etten; Robert G. Steen; Huy L. Nguyen; Andrew B. Castle; Donna K. Slonim; Bing Ge; Chad Nusbaum; Greg Schuler; Eric S. Lander; Thomas J. Hudson

Radiation hybrid (RH) maps are a useful tool for genome analysis, providing a direct method for localizing genes and anchoring physical maps and genomic sequence along chromosomes. The construction of a comprehensive RH map for the human genome has resulted in gene maps reflecting the location of more than 30,000 human genes. Here we report the first comprehensive RH map of the mouse genome. The map contains 2,486 loci screened against an RH panel of 93 cell lines. Most loci (93%) are simple sequence length polymorphisms (SSLPs) taken from the mouse genetic map, thereby providing direct integration between these two key maps. We performed RH mapping by a new and efficient approach in which we replaced traditional gel- or hybridization-based assays by a homogeneous 5´-nuclease assay involving a single common probe for all genetic markers. The map provides essentially complete connectivity and coverage across the genome, and good resolution for ordering loci, with 1 centiRay (cR) corresponding to an average of approximately 100 kb. The RH map, together with an accompanying World-Wide Web server, makes it possible for any investigator to rapidly localize sequences in the mouse genome. Together with the previously constructed genetic map and a YAC-based physical map reported in a companion paper, the fundamental maps required for mouse genomics are now available.


Nature Genetics | 1999

A YAC-based physical map of the mouse genome.

Chad Nusbaum; Donna K. Slonim; Katrina L. Harris; Bruce Birren; Robert G. Steen; Lincoln Stein; Joyce Miller; William F. Dietrich; Robert Nahf; Victoria Wang; Olga Merport; Andrew B. Castle; Zeeshan Husain; Gail Farino; Delphine Gray; Mechele O. Anderson; Richard Devine; Lloyd T. Horton; Wenjuan Ye; Xiaoyun Wu; Vardouhie Kouyoumjian; Irina S. Zemsteva; Yi Wu; Alville Collymore; Dorothy F. Courtney; James Tam; Matthew Cadman; Andrew R. Haynes; Christine Heuston; Tracy Marsland

A physical map of the mouse genome is an essential tool for both positional cloning and genomic sequencing in this key model system for biomedical research. Indeed, the construction of a mouse physical map with markers spaced at an average interval of 300 kb is one of the stated goals of the Human Genome Project. Here we report the results of a project at the Whitehead Institute/MIT Center for Genome Research to construct such a physical map of the mouse. We built the map by screening sequenced-tagged sites (STSs) against a large-insert yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) library and then integrating the STS-content information with a dense genetic map. The integrated map shows the location of 9,787 loci, providing landmarks with an average spacing of approximately 300 kb and affording YAC coverage of approximately 92% of the mouse genome. We also report the results of a project at the MRC UK Mouse Genome Centre targeted at chromosome X. The project produced a YAC-based map containing 619 loci (with 121 loci in common with the Whitehead map and 498 additional loci), providing especially dense coverage of this sex chromosome. The YAC-based physical map directly facilitates positional cloning of mouse mutations by providing ready access to most of the genome. More generally, use of this map in addition to a newly constructed radiation hybrid (RH) map provides a comprehensive framework for mouse genomic studies.


Nature Genetics | 2001

A radiation hybrid map of mouse genes.

Thomas J. Hudson; Deanna M. Church; Simon Greenaway; Huy L. Nguyen; April Cook; Robert G. Steen; William J. Van Etten; Andrew B. Castle; Mark Strivens; Pamela Trickett; Christine Heuston; Claire Davison; Anne Southwell; Rachel E. Hardisty; Anabel Varela-Carver; Andrew R. Haynes; Patricia Rodriguez-Tome; Hirofumi Doi; Minoru S.H. Ko; Joan Pontius; Lynn M. Schriml; Lukas Wagner; Donna Maglott; Steve D.M. Brown; Eric S. Lander; Greg Schuler; Paul Denny

A comprehensive gene-based map of a genome is a powerful tool for genetic studies and is especially useful for the positional cloning and positional candidate approaches. The availability of gene maps for multiple organisms provides the foundation for detailed conserved-orthology maps showing the correspondence between conserved genomic segments. These maps make it possible to use cross-species information in gene hunts and shed light on the evolutionary forces that shape the genome. Here we report a radiation hybrid map of mouse genes, a combined project of the Whitehead Institute/Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for Genome Research, the Medical Research Council UK Mouse Genome Centre, and the National Center for Biotechnology Information. The map contains 11,109 genes, screened against the T31 RH panel and positioned relative to a reference map containing 2,280 mouse genetic markers. It includes 3,658 genes homologous to the human genome sequence and provides a framework for overlaying the human genome sequence to the mouse and for sequencing the mouse genome.


Microbes and Infection | 1999

Loci influencing development of Th responses. Identification from in vitro analysis

Mehmet L. Güler; James D. Gorham; William F. Dietrich; Robert G. Steen; Curt Parvin; Domenic Fenoglio; Andrew Grupe; Gary Peltz; Kenneth M. Murphy

Department of Pathology and Center for Immunology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA Department of Genetics, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard Medical School, 200 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA Roche Bioscience S3-1, Palo Alto, CA 94303, USA


Nature | 1996

A comprehensive genetic map of the mouse genome.

William F. Dietrich; Joyce Miller; Robert G. Steen; Mark Merchant; Deborah Damron-Boles; Zeeshan Husain; Robert Dredge; Mark J. Daly; Kimberly A. Ingalls; Tara J. O'Connor; Cheryl A. Evans; Margaret M. DeAngelis; David M. Levinson; Leonid Kruglyak; Nathan Goodman; Neal G. Copeland; Nancy A. Jenkins; Trevor Hawkins; Lincoln Stein; David C. Page; Eric S. Lander


Nature | 1997

Phenotype of mice lacking functional Deleted in colorectal cancer (Dcc) gene

Amin Fazeli; Stephanie L. Dickinson; Michelle L. Hermiston; Robert V. Tighe; Robert G. Steen; Clayton Small; Esther T. Stoeckli; Kazuko Keino-Masu; Masayuki Masu; Helen Rayburn; Jonathan W. Simons; Roderick T. Bronson; Jeffrey I. Gordon; Marc Tessier-Lavigne; Robert A. Weinberg


Science | 1993

A genetic linkage map of the mouse: Current applications and future prospects

Neal G. Copeland; Nancy A. Jenkins; Gilbert Dj; Jt Eppig; Maltais Lj; Joyce Miller; William F. Dietrich; Alix Weaver; Stephen E. Lincoln; Robert G. Steen


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1996

Genetic mapping of a murine locus controlling development of T helper 1/T helper 2 type responses.

J D Gorham; M L Güler; Robert G. Steen; A J Mackey; M J Daly; K Frederick; William F. Dietrich; Kenneth M. Murphy

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Joyce Miller

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Nancy A. Jenkins

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Neal G. Copeland

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Lincoln Stein

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

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James D. Gorham

Washington University in St. Louis

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Kenneth M. Murphy

Washington University in St. Louis

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Mark Merchant

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Mehmet L. Güler

Washington University in St. Louis

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