A first high-density map of 981 biallelic markers on human chromosome 14

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_EA283A7C368E
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
A first high-density map of 981 biallelic markers on human chromosome 14
Journal
Genomics
Author(s)
Escary  J. L., Bottius  E., Prince  N., Reyes  C., Fiawoumo  Y., Caloustian  C., Bruls  T., Fujiyama  A., Cooper  R. S., Adeyemo  A. A., Lathrop  G. M., Weissenbach  J., Gyapay  G., Foglio  M., Beckmann  J. S.
ISSN
0888-7543 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
12/2000
Volume
70
Number
2
Pages
153-64
Notes
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't --- Old month value: Dec 1
Abstract
As the largest set of sequence variants, single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) constitute powerful assets for mapping genes and mutations related to common diseases and for pharmacogenetic studies. A major goal in human genetics is to establish a high-density map of the genome containing several hundred thousand SNPs. Here we assayed 3.7 Mb (154,397 bp in 24 alleles) of chromosome 14 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) and sequence-tagged sites, for sequence variation in DNA samples from 12 African individuals. We identified and mapped 480 biallelic markers (459 SNPs and 21 small insertions and deletions), equally distributed between EST and non-EST classes. Extensive research in public databases also yielded 604 chromosome 14 SNPs (dbSNPs), 520 of which could be mapped and 19 of which are common between CNG (i.e., identified at the Centre National de Genotypage) and dbSNP polymorphisms. We present a dense map of SNP variation of human chromosome 14 based on 981 nonredundant biallelic markers present among 1345 radiation hybrid mapped sequence objects. Next, bioinformatic tools allowed 945 significant sequence alignments to chromosome 14 contigs, giving the precise chromosome sequence position for 70% of the mapped sequences and SNPs. In addition, these tools also permitted the identification and mapping of 273 SNPs in 159 known genes. The availability of this SNP map will permit a wide range of genetic studies on a complete chromosome. The recognition of 45 genes with multiple SNPs, by allowing the construction of haplotypes, should facilitate pharmacogenetic studies in the corresponding regions.
Keywords
*Alleles Chromosome Mapping *Chromosomes, Human, Pair 14 *Genetic Markers Heterozygote Humans Polymorphism, Genetic
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
25/01/2008 17:18
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:12
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