排序方式: 共有126条查询结果,搜索用时 62 毫秒
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KU Ludwig E Mangold S Herms S Nowak H Reutter A Paul J Becker R Herberz T Alchawa E Nasser AC Böhmer M Mattheisen MA Alblas S Barth N Kluck C Lauster B Braumann RH Reich A Hemprich S Pötzsch B Blaumeiser N Daratsianos T Kreusch JC Murray ML Marazita I Ruczinski AF Scott TH Beaty FJ Kramer TF Wienker RP Steegers-Theunissen M Rubini PA Mossey P Hoffmann C Lange S Cichon P Propping M Knapp MM Nöthen 《Nature genetics》2012,44(9):968-971
We have conducted the first meta-analyses for nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCL/P) using data from the two largest genome-wide association studies published to date. We confirmed associations with all previously identified loci and identified six additional susceptibility regions (1p36, 2p21, 3p11.1, 8q21.3, 13q31.1 and 15q22). Analysis of phenotypic variability identified the first specific genetic risk factor for NSCLP (nonsyndromic cleft lip plus palate) (rs8001641; P(NSCLP) = 6.51 × 10(-11); homozygote relative risk = 2.41, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.84-3.16). 相似文献
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Antisense transcription: A critical look in both directions 总被引:2,自引:1,他引:2
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Human genome sequence variation and the influence of gene history,mutation and recombination 总被引:25,自引:0,他引:25
Reich DE Schaffner SF Daly MJ McVean G Mullikin JC Higgins JM Richter DJ Lander ES Altshuler D 《Nature genetics》2002,32(1):135-142
Variation in the human genome sequence is key to understanding susceptibility to disease in modern populations and the history of ancestral populations. Unlocking this information requires knowledge of the patterns and underlying causes of human sequence diversity. By applying a new population-genetic framework to two genome-wide polymorphism surveys, we find that the human genome contains sizeable regions (stretching over tens of thousands of base pairs) that have intrinsically high and low rates of sequence variation. We show that the primary determinant of these patterns is shared genealogical history. Only a fraction of the variation (at most 25%) is due to the local mutation rate. By measuring the average distance over which genealogical histories are typically preserved, these data provide the first genome-wide estimate of the average extent of correlation among variants (linkage disequilibrium). The results are best explained by extreme variability in the recombination rate at a fine scale, and provide the first empirical evidence that such recombination 'hot spots' are a general feature of the human genome and have a principal role in shaping genetic variation in the human population. 相似文献
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