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Origins and functional impact of copy number variation in the human genome

Authors :
Dalila Pinto
Daniel G. MacArthur
Yujun Zhang
Omer Gokcumen
Armand Valsesia
Ifejinelo Onyiah
Chris P. Barnes
Lars Feuk
Stephen W. Scherer
Andy Wing Chun Pang
Chun Hwa Ihm
K. Kristiansson
Chris Tyler-Smith
Donald F. Conrad
Samuel Robson
Jeffrey R. MacDonald
Matthew E. Hurles
Klaudia Walter
Min Hu
Peter J. Campbell
Nigel P. Carter
Kathy Stirrups
Tomas W Fitzgerald
T. Daniel Andrews
John Wei
Jan Aerts
Richard Redon
Charles Lee
Source :
Nature. 464(7289)
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Structural variations of DNA greater than 1 kilobase in size account for most bases that vary among human genomes, but are still relatively under-ascertained. Here we use tiling oligonucleotide microarrays, comprising 42 million probes, to generate a comprehensive map of 11,700 copy number variations (CNVs) greater than 443 base pairs, of which most (8,599) have been validated independently. For 4,978 of these CNVs, we generated reference genotypes from 450 individuals of European, African or East Asian ancestry. The predominant mutational mechanisms differ among CNV size classes. Retrotransposition has duplicated and inserted some coding and non-coding DNA segments randomly around the genome. Furthermore, by correlation with known trait-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), we identified 30 loci with CNVs that are candidates for influencing disease susceptibility. Despite this, having assessed the completeness of our map and the patterns of linkage disequilibrium between CNVs and SNPs, we conclude that, for complex traits, the heritability void left by genome-wide association studies will not be accounted for by common CNVs.

Details

ISSN :
14764687
Volume :
464
Issue :
7289
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....084590f17a6ca7800869ab45a661b451