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High-density single-nucleotide polymorphism maps of the human genome
Authors:Miller Raymond D  Phillips Michael S  Jo Inho  Donaldson Miriam A  Studebaker Joel F  Addleman Nicholas  Alfisi Steven V  Ankener Wendy M  Bhatti Hamid A  Callahan Chad E  Carey Benjamin J  Conley Cheryl L  Cyr Justin M  Derohannessian Vram  Donaldson Rachel A  Elosua Carolina  Ford Stacey E  Forman Angela M  Gelfand Craig A  Grecco Nicole M  Gutendorf Susan M  Hock Cricket R  Hozza Mark J  Hur Soyoung  In Sun Mi  Jackson Diana L  Jo Sangmee Ahn  Jung Sung-Chul  Kim Sook  Kimm Kuchan  Kloss Ellen F  Koboldt Daniel C  Kuebler Jennifer M  Kuo Feng-Shen  Lathrop Jessica A  Lee Jong-Keuk  Leis Kathy L  Livingston Stephanie A
Institution:Washington University, Division of Dermatology, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Abstract:Here we report a large, extensively characterized set of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) covering the human genome. We determined the allele frequencies of 55,018 SNPs in African Americans, Asians (Japanese-Chinese), and European Americans as part of The SNP Consortium's Allele Frequency Project. A subset of 8333 SNPs was also characterized in Koreans. Because these SNPs were ascertained in the same way, the data set is particularly useful for modeling. Our results document that much genetic variation is shared among populations. For autosomes, some 44% of these SNPs have a minor allele frequency > or =10% in each population, and the average allele frequency differences between populations with different continental origins are less than 19%. However, the several percentage point allele frequency differences among the closely related Korean, Japanese, and Chinese populations suggest caution in using mixtures of well-established populations for case-control genetic studies of complex traits. We estimate that approximately 7% of these SNPs are private SNPs with minor allele frequencies <1%. A useful set of characterized SNPs with large allele frequency differences between populations (>60%) can be used for admixture studies. High-density maps of high-quality, characterized SNPs produced by this project are freely available.
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