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Genotype, haplotype and copy-number variation in worldwide human populations
Jakobsson, Mattias; Scholz, Sonja W.; Scheet, Paul; Gibbs, J. Raphael; Van Liere, Jenna M.; Fung, Hon-Chung; Szpiech, Zachary A.; Degnan, James H.; Wang, Kai; Guerreiro, Rita; Bras, Jose M.; Schymick, Jennifer C.; Hernandez, Dena G.; Traynor, Bryan J.; Simon-Sanchez, Javier; Matarin, Mar; Britton, Angela; van de Leemput, Joyce; Rafferty, Ian; Bucan, Maja; Cann, Howard M.; Hardy, John A.; Rosenberg, Noah A.; Singleton, Andrew B.
2008-02-21
Citation:Jakobsson, Mattias; Scholz, Sonja W.; Scheet, Paul; Gibbs, J. Raphael; VanLiere, Jenna M.; Fung, Hon-Chung; Szpiech, Zachary A.; Degnan, James H.; Wang, Kai; Guerreiro, Rita; Bras, Jose M.; Schymick, Jennifer C.; Hernandez, Dena G.; Traynor, Bryan J.; Simon-Sanchez, Javier; Matarin, Mar; Britton, Angela; van de Leemput, Joyce; Rafferty, Ian; Bucan, Maja; Cann, Howard M.; Hardy, John A.; Rosenberg, Noah A.; Singleton, Andrew B.. (2008) "Genotype, haplotype and copy-number variation in worldwide human populations." Nature 451(7181): 998-1003. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/62552>
Abstract: Genome-wide patterns of variation across individuals provide a powerful source of data for uncovering the history of migration, range expansion, and adaptation of the human species. However, high-resolution surveys of variation in genotype, haplotype and copy number have generally focused on a small number of population groups(1-3). Here we report the analysis of high-quality genotypes at 525,910 single-nucleotide polymorphisms ( SNPs) and 396 copy-number-variable loci in a worldwide sample of 29 populations. Analysis of SNP genotypes yields strongly supported fine-scale inferences about population structure. Increasing linkage disequilibrium is observed with increasing geographic distance from Africa, as expected under a serial founder effect for the out-of-Africa spread of human populations. New approaches for haplotype analysis produce inferences about population structure that complement results based on unphased SNPs. Despite a difference from SNPs in the frequency spectrum of the copy-number variants (CNVs) detected-including a comparatively large number of CNVs in previously unexamined populations from Oceania and the Americas-the global distribution of CNVs largely accords with population structure analyses for SNP data sets of similar size. Our results produce new inferences about inter-population variation, support the utility of CNVs in human population-genetic research, and serve as a genomic resource for human-genetic studies in diverse worldwide populations.