The extent of human genomic structural variation suggests that there must be portions of the genome yet to be discovered, annotated and characterized at the sequence level. We present a resource and analysis of 2,363 new insertion sequences corresponding to 720 genomic loci. We found that a substantial fraction of these sequences are either missing, fragmented or misassigned when compared to recent de novo sequence assemblies from short-read next-generation sequence data. We determined that 18-37% of these new insertions are copy-number polymorphic, including loci that show extensive population stratification among Europeans, Asians and Africans. Complete sequencing of 156 of these insertions identified new exons and conserved noncoding seq...
High-throughput sequencing has recently begun to revolutionize the study of structural variants in t...
The human genome reference (HGR) completion marked the genomics era beginning, yet despite its utili...
Over the last two decades the advancement in DNA sequencing technologies has enormously increased th...
The extent of human genomic structural variation suggests that there must be portions of the genome ...
Genetic variation among individual humans occurs on many different scales, ranging from gross altera...
Background: Structural variants comprise diverse genomic arrangements including deletions, insertion...
The current human reference genome is predominantly derived from a single individual and it does not...
Background: The non-reference sequences (NRS) represent structure variations in human genome with po...
The human reference genome is used extensively in modern biological research. However, a single cons...
SummaryUnderstanding the prevailing mutational mechanisms responsible for human genome structural va...
The human genome is arguably the most complete mammalian reference assembly, yet more than 160 euchr...
Elucidating the full spectrum of genetic variations across the human population is a fundamental pur...
Here we integrate the de novo assembly of an Asian and an African genome with the NCBI reference hum...
The human genome is arguably the most complete mammalian reference assembly, yet more than 160 euchr...
Abstract Background Several genomes have now been seq...
High-throughput sequencing has recently begun to revolutionize the study of structural variants in t...
The human genome reference (HGR) completion marked the genomics era beginning, yet despite its utili...
Over the last two decades the advancement in DNA sequencing technologies has enormously increased th...
The extent of human genomic structural variation suggests that there must be portions of the genome ...
Genetic variation among individual humans occurs on many different scales, ranging from gross altera...
Background: Structural variants comprise diverse genomic arrangements including deletions, insertion...
The current human reference genome is predominantly derived from a single individual and it does not...
Background: The non-reference sequences (NRS) represent structure variations in human genome with po...
The human reference genome is used extensively in modern biological research. However, a single cons...
SummaryUnderstanding the prevailing mutational mechanisms responsible for human genome structural va...
The human genome is arguably the most complete mammalian reference assembly, yet more than 160 euchr...
Elucidating the full spectrum of genetic variations across the human population is a fundamental pur...
Here we integrate the de novo assembly of an Asian and an African genome with the NCBI reference hum...
The human genome is arguably the most complete mammalian reference assembly, yet more than 160 euchr...
Abstract Background Several genomes have now been seq...
High-throughput sequencing has recently begun to revolutionize the study of structural variants in t...
The human genome reference (HGR) completion marked the genomics era beginning, yet despite its utili...
Over the last two decades the advancement in DNA sequencing technologies has enormously increased th...