Read count-based method for high-throughput allelic genotyping of transposable elements and structural variants

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Abstract

Background: Like other structural variants, transposable element insertions can be highly polymorphic across individuals. Their functional impact, however, remains poorly understood. Current genome-wide approaches for genotyping insertion-site polymorphisms based on targeted or whole-genome sequencing remain very expensive and can lack accuracy, hence new large-scale genotyping methods are needed. Results: We describe a high-throughput method for genotyping transposable element insertions and other types of structural variants that can be assayed by breakpoint PCR. The method relies on next-generation sequencing of multiplex, site-specific PCR amplification products and read count-based genotype calls. We show that this method is flexible, efficient (it does not require rounds of optimization), cost-effective and highly accurate. Conclusions: This method can benefit a wide range of applications from the routine genotyping of animal and plant populations to the functional study of structural variants in humans.

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Kuhn, A., Ong, Y. M., Quake, S. R., & Burkholder, W. F. (2015). Read count-based method for high-throughput allelic genotyping of transposable elements and structural variants. BMC Genomics, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-015-1700-4

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