1. The Transgenic RNAi Project at Harvard Medical School: Resources and Validation
- Author
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Donald Hall, Richelle Sopko, Atsushi Toyoda, Kim McCall, Gregory J. Hannon, Rong Tao, Shu Kondo, Dong Yan, Stephanie E. Mohr, Xia Wang, Lizabeth A. Perkins, Kathleen Ayers, Lu Ping Liu, Jian-Quan Ni, Ian Flockhart, Benjamin Czech, Marianna Foos, Norbert Perrimon, Amy Housden, Asao Fujiyama, Colleen F. Kelley, Ralph A. Neumüller, Allison Blum, Karen L. Hibbard, Sakara Randkelv, Annette L. Parks, Christians Villalta, Lynn Cooley, Richard Binari, Yanhui Hu, Laura Holderbaum, Pema Namgyal, Amanda Cavallaro, Hye Seok Shim, Audrey Miller, Qiao Huan-Huan, Donghui Yang-Zhou, Xia Jiang, Ruth Lehmann, and Ryu Ueda
- Subjects
Genetics ,Biomedical Research ,fungi ,Genetic Vectors ,Medical school ,Genes, Insect ,Investigations ,Biology ,Access to Information ,Animals, Genetically Modified ,Access to information ,RNA interference ,Animals ,Drosophila ,RNA Interference ,Functional studies ,Web resource ,Schools, Medical ,Boston - Abstract
To facilitate large-scale functional studies in Drosophila, the Drosophila Transgenic RNAi Project (TRiP) at Harvard Medical School (HMS) was established along with several goals: developing efficient vectors for RNAi that work in all tissues, generating a genome-scale collection of RNAi stocks with input from the community, distributing the lines as they are generated through existing stock centers, validating as many lines as possible using RT–qPCR and phenotypic analyses, and developing tools and web resources for identifying RNAi lines and retrieving existing information on their quality. With these goals in mind, here we describe in detail the various tools we developed and the status of the collection, which is currently composed of 11,491 lines and covering 71% of Drosophila genes. Data on the characterization of the lines either by RT–qPCR or phenotype is available on a dedicated website, the RNAi Stock Validation and Phenotypes Project (RSVP, http://www.flyrnai.org/RSVP.html), and stocks are available from three stock centers, the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (United States), National Institute of Genetics (Japan), and TsingHua Fly Center (China).
- Published
- 2015
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