| View Larger Image | Mouse Phenotypes: A Handbook of Mutation Analysis (Manual) | Hardcover-spiralby Virginia E. Papaioannou (Author), Richard R. Behringer (Author)
| List Price: | $89.00 | | Price: | $80.10 | | You Save: | $8.90 (10%) | | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| | Binding: | Hardcover-spiral | | Publisher: | Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press | | Page Count: | 235 Pages | | Publication Date: | November 01, 2004 | | Sales Rank: | 653,255rd |
|
EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description The generation of mutant mice raises many questions about the best means of phenotypic analysis, breeding, and maintenance. The answers are now available from two experts with a wealth of detailed knowledge never previously assembled in one volume. Informal and highly practical, this handbook provides step–by–step methods for troubleshooting experiments, from the basics of gene targeting through the analysis of postnatal effects. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 1 review)
| Excellent Overview by R. D. Nelson (Salt Lake City, UT) 5 Stars January 12, 2007 This text is an excellent addition to "Manipulating The Mouse Embryo". It has a step-by-step approach to breeding and characterizing genetically altered mouse lines. I recommend it for any investigator and especially for those working directly with such mice.
| |
SIMILAR PRODUCTS |

| Manipulating the Mouse Embryo: A Laboratory Manual, Third Edition by Andras Nagy (Author), Marina Gertsenstein (Author), Kristina Vintersten (Author), Richard Behringer (Author)
Regarded as the "Bible" of mammalian embryo manipulation techniques since the 1986 publication of the first edition of Manipulating the Mouse Embryo: A Laboratory Manual, the third edition of this essential laboratory resource has now been completely reorganized, rewritten, and updated by a new cast of authors. The result is a compilation of new, cutting–-edge protocols that include embryonic stem cell production and genetic manipulation, mouse chimeras, mouse cloning, assisted...
| 
| The Atlas of Mouse Development by Matthew H. Kaufman (Author)
Not since the early 1970s has there been an attempt to describe and illustrate the anatomy of the developing mouse embryo. More than ever such material is needed by biologists as they begin to unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying development and differentiation. After more than ten years of painstaking work, Matt Kaufman has completed The Atlas of Mouse Development--the definitive account of mouse embryology and development. For all those researching or studying mammalian development,...
| 
| The Laboratory Mouse (Handbook of Experimental Animals) by Hedrich Hans (Editor), Hans Hedrich (Editor)
Among animals used in research, teaching and testing, mice are now widely recognized as the most important model for human diseases and disorders. They comprise the majority of all experimental mammals and tend to be the model of choice used for research into many diseases/disorders including cancer, heart disease, asthma, Alzheimer's, Down syndrome, deafness, osteoporosis, obesity, diabetes and even mental health research. Additionally the laboratory mouse continues to play a widely...
| 
| What's Wrong With My Mouse: Behavioral Phenotyping of Transgenic and Knockout Mice by Jacqueline N. Crawley PhD (Author)
Dr. Jacqueline N. Crawley, author of the First and Second Editions of What’s Wrong with My Mouse? Behavioral Phenotyping of Transgenic and Knockout Mice,continues to field calls and e-mails from molecular geneticists who ask: how do I run behavioral assays to find out what’s wrong with my mouse? Turn to What’s Wrong with My Mouse? to discover the wealth of mouse behavioral tasks and to get the guidance you need to select the best methods and necessary controls. Chapters are...
| 
| The Anatomical Basis of Mouse Development by Matthew H. Kaufman (Author), Jonathan B.L. Bard (Author)
This book is an essential anatomical resource for developmental biologists who need to know about any aspect of mouse developmental anatomy, as well as for geneticists using the mouse embryo as a model. The book is a companion to Kaufman's The Atlas of Mouse Development, and details the developmental anatomy of the early embryo, the transitional tissues, and all the major organ systems. It also provides extensive comparisons with human developmental anatomy, both normal and abnormal. The book...
|
|
|