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martes, 20 de noviembre de 2012

Secuencias variopintas del genoma humano



A map of human genome variation from population-scale sequencing

    Aquí ofrezco alguna información acerca de un proyecto muy importante. Se trata del estudio del genoma humano a distintos niveles, a fin de reconocer las variaciones de secuencias y vincularlas con distintas funciones y fenotipos (la manera que se expresa una variación genética). Un estudio que puede compararse a la pesca en profundidad dentro del genoma humano. De momento ha arrojado 15 millones de polimorfismos de un nucleótido, un millón de inserciones cortas y hasta 20,000 variantes estructurales hasta ahora desconocidas.
Nature 467,1061–1073

Abstract: 
  • Introduction
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  • Data generation, alignment and variant discovery
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  • Power to detect variants
  • Genotype accuracy
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  • Putative functional variants
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  • Application to association studies
  • Mutation, recombination and natural selection
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  • Discussion
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  • Methods
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  • Change history
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  • References
  • Acknowledgements
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  • Author information
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  • Supplementary information
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  • Comments

  • The 1000 Genomes Project aims to provide a deep characterization of human genome sequence variation as a foundation for investigating the relationship between genotype and phenotype. Here we present results of the pilot phase of the project, designed to develop and compare different strategies for genome-wide sequencing with high-throughput platforms. We undertook three projects: low-coverage whole-genome sequencing of 179 individuals from four populations; high-coverage sequencing of two mother–father–child trios; and exon-targeted sequencing of 697 individuals from seven populations. We describe the location, allele frequency and local haplotype structure of approximately 15 million single nucleotide polymorphisms, 1 million short insertions and deletions, and 20,000 structural variants, most of which were previously undescribed. We show that, because we have catalogued the vast majority of common variation, over 95% of the currently accessible variants found in any individual are present in this data set. On average, each person is found to carry approximately 250 to 300 loss-of-function variants in annotated genes and 50 to 100 variants previously implicated in inherited disorders. We demonstrate how these results can be used to inform association and functional studies. From the two trios, we directly estimate the rate ofde novo germline base substitution mutations to be approximately 10−8 per base pair per generation. We explore the data with regard to signatures of natural selection, and identify a marked reduction of genetic variation in the neighbourhood of genes, due to selection at linked sites. These methods and public data will support the next phase of human genetic research.

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