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Discovery and genotyping of genome structural polymorphism by sequencing on a population scale

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2016

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Handsaker, Robert E., Joshua M. Korn, James Nemesh, and Steven A. McCarroll. 2016. “Discovery and genotyping of genome structural polymorphism by sequencing on a population scale.” Nature genetics 43 (3): 269-276. doi:10.1038/ng.768. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.768.

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Abstract

Accurate and complete analysis of genome variation in large populations will be required to understand the role of genome variation in complex disease. We present an analytical framework for characterizing genome deletion polymorphism in populations, using sequence data that are distributed across hundreds or thousands of genomes. Our approach uses population-level relationships to re-interpret the technical features of sequence data that often reflect structural variation. In the 1000 Genomes Project pilot, this approach identified deletion polymorphism across 168 genomes (sequenced at 4x average coverage) with sensitivity and specificity unmatched by other algorithms. We also describe a way to determine the allelic state or genotype of each deletion polymorphism in each genome; the 1000 Genomes Project used this approach to type 13,826 deletion polymorphisms (48 bp – 960 kbp) at high accuracy in populations. These methods offer a way to relate genome structural polymorphism to complex disease in populations.

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