Many studies have demonstrated that divergence levels generated by different mutation types vary and covary across the human genome. To improve our still-incomplete understanding of the mechanistic basis of this phenomenon, we analyze several mutation types simultaneously, anchoring their variation to specific regions of the genome. Using hidden Markov models on insertion, deletion, nucleotide substitution, and microsatellite divergence estimates inferred from human-orangutan alignments of neutrally evolving genomic sequences, we segment the human genome into regions corresponding to different divergence states--each uniquely characterized by specific combinations of divergence levels. We then parsed the mutagenic contributions of various b...
[[abstract]]To study the genomic divergence between human and chimpanzee, large-scale genomic sequen...
DNA sequence variation is currently a major source of data for studying human origins, evolution, an...
<p>Divergence rates are quantified as the proportion of qualifying bases that differ with no adjustm...
The process of evolution is of both scientific and medical interest. This thesis presents several st...
Segmental duplications contribute significantly to the evolution, adaptation and diseaseassociated ...
Abstract Background It has been suggested that chromosomal rearrangements harbor the molecular footp...
SummaryUnderstanding the prevailing mutational mechanisms responsible for human genome structural va...
Human segmental duplications are hotspots for nonallelic homologous recombination leading to genomic...
Comparative genomics allow us to search the human genome for segments that were extensively changed ...
Large-scale genomic rearrangements are a major force of evolutionary change and the ascertainment of...
In the course of our efforts to build extended regions of human genomic sequence by assembling indiv...
<div><p>Microsatellites are a major component of the human genome, and their evolution has been much...
Segmental duplications contribute to human evolution, adaptation and genomic instability but are oft...
AbstractSo far, there is no genome-wide estimation of the mutational spectrum in humans. In this stu...
<p>* CoalHMM estimates in 1Mb chunks</p> <p>ILS09_gamma_aln_coord_clean_fixscale.csv</p> <p>Estimate...
[[abstract]]To study the genomic divergence between human and chimpanzee, large-scale genomic sequen...
DNA sequence variation is currently a major source of data for studying human origins, evolution, an...
<p>Divergence rates are quantified as the proportion of qualifying bases that differ with no adjustm...
The process of evolution is of both scientific and medical interest. This thesis presents several st...
Segmental duplications contribute significantly to the evolution, adaptation and diseaseassociated ...
Abstract Background It has been suggested that chromosomal rearrangements harbor the molecular footp...
SummaryUnderstanding the prevailing mutational mechanisms responsible for human genome structural va...
Human segmental duplications are hotspots for nonallelic homologous recombination leading to genomic...
Comparative genomics allow us to search the human genome for segments that were extensively changed ...
Large-scale genomic rearrangements are a major force of evolutionary change and the ascertainment of...
In the course of our efforts to build extended regions of human genomic sequence by assembling indiv...
<div><p>Microsatellites are a major component of the human genome, and their evolution has been much...
Segmental duplications contribute to human evolution, adaptation and genomic instability but are oft...
AbstractSo far, there is no genome-wide estimation of the mutational spectrum in humans. In this stu...
<p>* CoalHMM estimates in 1Mb chunks</p> <p>ILS09_gamma_aln_coord_clean_fixscale.csv</p> <p>Estimate...
[[abstract]]To study the genomic divergence between human and chimpanzee, large-scale genomic sequen...
DNA sequence variation is currently a major source of data for studying human origins, evolution, an...
<p>Divergence rates are quantified as the proportion of qualifying bases that differ with no adjustm...