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1.
Cell ; 143(5): 837-47, 2010 Nov 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21111241

ABSTRACT

Understanding the prevailing mutational mechanisms responsible for human genome structural variation requires uniformity in the discovery of allelic variants and precision in terms of breakpoint delineation. We develop a resource based on capillary end sequencing of 13.8 million fosmid clones from 17 human genomes and characterize the complete sequence of 1054 large structural variants corresponding to 589 deletions, 384 insertions, and 81 inversions. We analyze the 2081 breakpoint junctions and infer potential mechanism of origin. Three mechanisms account for the bulk of germline structural variation: microhomology-mediated processes involving short (2-20 bp) stretches of sequence (28%), nonallelic homologous recombination (22%), and L1 retrotransposition (19%). The high quality and long-range continuity of the sequence reveals more complex mutational mechanisms, including repeat-mediated inversions and gene conversion, that are most often missed by other methods, such as comparative genomic hybridization, single nucleotide polymorphism microarrays, and next-generation sequencing.


Subject(s)
Genome, Human , Genomic Structural Variation , Mutation , Base Sequence , Gene Conversion , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Sequence Analysis, DNA
2.
Nat Methods ; 7(5): 365-71, 2010 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20440878

ABSTRACT

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 sequences not yet represented in the reference genome. We developed a method to accurately genotype these new insertions by mapping next-generation sequencing datasets to the breakpoint, thereby providing a means to characterize copy-number status for regions previously inaccessible to single-nucleotide polymorphism microarrays.


Subject(s)
Contig Mapping/methods , Genome, Human , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , DNA Transposable Elements/genetics , Gene Frequency , Genomic Structural Variation/genetics , Genotype , Humans , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Molecular Sequence Data , Polymorphism, Genetic
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