The Genetic Epidemiology of Spontaneous Endometriosis in the Rhesus Monkey

: The etiology of endometriosis is uncertain, but there is increasing evidence that it is inherited as a complex genetic trait like diabetes or asthma. In such complex traits, multiple gene loci conferring susceptibility to the disease interact with each other and the environment to produce the phen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 2002-03, Vol.955 (1), p.233-238
Hauptverfasser: ZONDERVAN, KRINA, CARDON, LON, DESROSIERS, RONALD, HYDE, DALLAS, KEMNITZ, JOSEPH, MANSFIELD, KEITH, ROBERTS, JEFF, SCHEFFLER, JOAN, WEEKS, DANIEL E., KENNEDY, STEPHEN
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 233
container_title Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
container_volume 955
creator ZONDERVAN, KRINA
CARDON, LON
DESROSIERS, RONALD
HYDE, DALLAS
KEMNITZ, JOSEPH
MANSFIELD, KEITH
ROBERTS, JEFF
SCHEFFLER, JOAN
WEEKS, DANIEL E.
KENNEDY, STEPHEN
description : The etiology of endometriosis is uncertain, but there is increasing evidence that it is inherited as a complex genetic trait like diabetes or asthma. In such complex traits, multiple gene loci conferring susceptibility to the disease interact with each other and the environment to produce the phenotype. The study of such interactions in humans can be problematic. Thus, the availability of an animal model, which shares many aspects of anatomy and physiology with humans, is potentially a valuable tool for investigating the genetic epidemiology of the disease. Since endometriosis develops spontaneously in the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) and the tissue is morphologically identical to its human counterpart, this population provides a unique opportunity to conduct such studies in this condition.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2002.tb02784.x
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subjects Animals
Disease Models, Animal
endometriosis
Endometriosis - etiology
Endometriosis - genetics
epidemiology
Female
genetics
Macaca mulatta
Molecular Epidemiology
rhesus monkey
title The Genetic Epidemiology of Spontaneous Endometriosis in the Rhesus Monkey
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