C Aguado, M Gaya-Vidal, S Villatoro, M Oliva… - PLoS …, 2014 - journals.plos.org
In recent years different types of structural variants (SVs) have been discovered in the human genome and their functional impact has become increasingly clear. Inversions …
Recent studies have revealed that insertions and deletions (indels) are more different in their formation than previously assumed. What remains enigmatic is how the local DNA …
AD Sanders, M Hills, D Porubský, V Guryev… - Genome …, 2016 - genome.cshlp.org
Identifying genomic features that differ between individuals and cells can help uncover the functional variants that drive phenotypes and disease susceptibilities. For this, single-cell …
CA Albers, G Lunter, DG MacArthur, G McVean… - Genome …, 2011 - genome.cshlp.org
Small insertions and deletions (indels) are a common and functionally important type of sequence polymorphism. Most of the focus of studies of sequence variation is on single …
D Vicente-Salvador, M Puig… - Human Molecular …, 2017 - academic.oup.com
The growing catalogue of structural variants in humans often overlooks inversions as one of the most difficult types of variation to study, even though they affect phenotypic traits in …
CH Chen, TJ Chuang, BY Liao… - Genome Biology and …, 2009 - academic.oup.com
Human-specific small insertions and deletions (HS indels, with lengths< 100 bp) are reported to be ubiquitous in the human genome. However, whether these indels contribute …
Short insertions and deletions (indels) are the second most abundant form of human genetic variation, but our understanding of their origins and functional effects lags behind that of …
Background Identifying insertion/deletion polymorphisms (INDELs) with high confidence has been intrinsically challenging in short-read sequencing data. Here we report our approach …
A Martínez-Fundichely, S Casillas, R Egea… - Nucleic acids …, 2014 - academic.oup.com
The newest genomic advances have uncovered an unprecedented degree of structural variation throughout genomes, with great amounts of data accumulating rapidly. Here we …