Micro-indels (insertions or deletions shorter than 21 bps) constitute the second most frequent class of human gene mutation after single nucleotide variants. Despite the relative abundance of non-frameshifting indels, their damaging effect on protein structure and function has gone largely unstudied. We have developed a support vector machine-based method named DDIG-in (Detecting disease-causing genetic variations due to indels) to prioritize non-frameshifting indels by comparing disease-associated mutations with putatively neutral mutations from the 1,000 Genomes Project. The final model gives good discrimination for indels and is robust against annotation errors. A webserver implementing DDIG-in is available at http://sparks-lab.org/ddig.
CITATION STYLE
Zhao, H., Yang, Y., Lin, H., Zhang, X., Mort, M., Cooper, D. N., … Zhou, Y. (2013). DDIG-in: Discriminating between diseaseassociated and neutral non-frameshifting micro-indels. Genome Biology, 14(3). https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2013-14-3-r23
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