Abstract
The recent publication of the complete sequence of human chromosome 22 provides a platform from which to investigate genomic sequence variation. We report the identification and characterization of 12,267 potential variants (SNPs and other small insertions/deletions) of human chromosome 22, discovered in the overlaps of 460 clones used for the chromosome sequencing. We found, on average, 1 potential variant every 1.07 kb and approximately 18% of the potential variants involve insertions/deletions. The SNPs have been positioned both relative to each other, and to genes, predicted genes, repeat sequences, other genetic markers, and the 2730 SNPs previously identified on the chromosome. A subset of the SNPs were verified experimentally using either PCR-RFLP or genomic Invader assays. These experiments confirmed 92% of the potential variants in a panel of 92 individuals. [Details of the SNPs and RFLP assays can be found at http://www.sanger.ac.uk and in dbSNP.].
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CITATION STYLE
Dawson, E., Chen, Y., Hunt, S., Smink, L. J., Hunt, A., Rice, K., … Dunham, I. (2001). A SNP resource for human chromosome 22: Extracting dense clusters of SNPs from the genomic sequence. Genome Research, 11(1), 170–178. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.156901
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