Structural Variation in the Human Genome and its Role in Disease
Baylor College of Medicine · Texas Children's Hospital
Abstract
During the last quarter of the twentieth century, our knowledge about human genetic variation was limited mainly to the heterochromatin polymorphisms, large enough to be visible in the light microscope, and the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) identified by traditional PCR-based DNA sequencing. In the past five years, the rapid development and expanded use of microarray technologies, including oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridization and SNP genotyping arrays, as well as next-generation sequencing with "paired-end" methods, has enabled a whole-genome analysis with essentially unlimited resolution. The discovery of submicroscopic copy-number variations (CNVs) present in our genomes has…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 72.19
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 133
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Copy-number variation
- Biology
- Genetics
- Single-nucleotide polymorphism
- Structural variation
- SNP genotyping
- Genotyping
- Mendelian inheritance