Back to Search
Start Over
Discovery of genomic variation across a generation
- Source :
- Human Molecular Genetics
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Over the past 30 years (the timespan of a generation), advances in genomics technologies have revealed tremendous and unexpected variation in the human genome and have provided increasingly accurate answers to long-standing questions of how much genetic variation exists in human populations and to what degree the DNA complement changes between parents and offspring. Tracking the characteristics of these inherited and spontaneous (or de novo) variations has been the basis of the study of human genetic disease. From genome-wide microarray and next-generation sequencing scans, we now know that each human genome contains over 3 million single nucleotide variants when compared with the ~ 3 billion base pairs in the human reference genome, along with roughly an order of magnitude more DNA—approximately 30 megabase pairs (Mb)—being ‘structurally variable’, mostly in the form of indels and copy number changes. Additional large-scale variations include balanced inversions (average of 18 Mb) and complex, difficult-to-resolve alterations. Collectively, ~1% of an individual’s genome will differ from the human reference sequence. When comparing across a generation, fewer than 100 new genetic variants are typically detected in the euchromatic portion of a child’s genome. Driven by increasingly higher-resolution and higher-throughput sequencing technologies, newer and more accurate databases of genetic variation (for instance, more comprehensive structural variation data and phasing of combinations of variants along chromosomes) of worldwide populations will emerge to underpin the next era of discovery in human molecular genetics.
- Subjects :
- Male
AcademicSubjects/SCI01140
medicine.medical_specialty
Invited Review Article
Genomics
Biology
Genome
Structural variation
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Molecular genetics
Genetic variation
Genetics
medicine
Humans
Indel
Molecular Biology
Genetics (clinical)
030304 developmental biology
0303 health sciences
Whole Genome Sequencing
Genome, Human
Genetic Variation
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
General Medicine
Evolutionary biology
Mutation
Human genome
Female
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Reference genome
Genome-Wide Association Study
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14602083
- Volume :
- 30
- Issue :
- R2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Human molecular genetics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....383ae8f825b562a8a398e2fa7d9aba66