Abstract Genetically defined mice are a cornerstone of cancer research. The Jackson Laboratory (JAX) offers more than 13,500 unique mouse lines to the scientific community, many useful in advancing cancer research. Available are mouse models for specific cancers, xenograft recipients, immunodeficient platforms for PDX studies and multi-purpose tool strains having CRISPR/Cas9 utility, conditional/inducible expression (Cre-lox, FLP-frt, Tet-On/-Off), optogenetic function and calcium-sensing technologies. This poster will highlight some recently added models, more than 100 of which have cancer research applications. The portfolio of strains useful for transplantation/engraftment and “humanized” mouse research continues to expand and complement the NSG (NOD scid IL2rγc-/-) model as ideal tools for engraftment with a wide range of malignant or non-malignant human or mouse tissues. Fluorescent protein-expressing strains include Traffic Light Reporters for tracking of DNA repair pathways, Gene Editing Reporters for detection of homology directed repair (HDR) and non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) repair events, as well as several CRISPR Editing, Bxb1 Integrase Editing, Base Editor and Prime Editor tools. For example, the Rosa26PE2 mouse has Cre-inducible expression of a prime editor enzyme and a fluorescent reporter, allowing viral delivery of prime editing guide RNAs to introduce cancer mutations into the genome. Recently added CRISPR Array Repair Lineage Tracing (CARLIN and DARLIN) component strains allow researchers to achieve high barcode diversity in targeted cell populations. In addition to safeguarding each strain by cryopreservation, JAX has a comprehensive genetic quality control program that confirms mutation identity and genetic background, and screens for unwanted alleles (such as stray GFP, Cre, neo, etc.). Search the comprehensive collection of innovative mouse models using our improved JAX Mouse Search site (mice.jax.org). This resource includes models created by many generous donating institutions. Researchers are encouraged to donate their mouse lines via a very short Strain Submission form (jax.org/donate-a-mouse). Please also visit the JAX Oncology webpage for cancer research related strains and resources (jax.org/jax-mice-and-services/solutions-by-therapeutic-area/oncology). JAX is supported by the NIH, The Howard Hughes Medical Institute and other private charitable foundations. Citation Format: Jason Beckwith, Jennifer Merriam, Alicia Valenzuela, Darcy Pomerleau, Jennifer Kelmenson. Mouse models advancing cancer research - The Jackson Laboratory [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 2832.