Abstract
The uses of the Genome Reference Consortium's human reference sequence can be roughly categorized into three related but distinct categories: as a representative species genome, as a coordinate systemfor identifying variants, and as an alignment reference for variation detection algorithms. However, the use of this reference sequence as simultaneously a representative species genome and as an alignment reference leads to unnecessary artifacts for structural variation detection algorithms and limits their accuracy.We show how decoupling these two references and developing a separate alignment reference can significantly improve the accuracy of structural variation detection, lead to improved genotyping of disease related genes, and decrease the cost of studying polymorphismin a population.
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CITATION STYLE
Schröder, J., Girirajan, S., Papenfuss, A. T., & Medvedev, P. (2015). Improving the power of structural variation detection by augmenting the reference. PLoS ONE, 10(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136771
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