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Genomic copy number variation, human health, and disease

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posted on 2009-08-03, 15:49 authored by Louise V. Wain, John A. L. Armour, Martin D. Tobin
Despite the long recognised effects of chromosomal structural abnormalities and completion of the Human Genome Project, much of the structural variation in the genome has gone unrecognised until recently. Deletions and duplications of DNA strands of between a few hundred bp and several million bp—collectively referred to as copy number variants—are now known to be widespread. Since 2007, rigorous and adequately powered genome-wide association studies based on single nucleotide polymorphisms have yielded replicated associations to several common diseases. Some copy number variants explain rare, previously uncharacterised disorders, and they are now expected to explain some of the genetic contribution to common diseases. We review efforts to map copy number variants and discuss present and future prospects for assessment of their relation to human health and disease.

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Citation

The Lancet, 2009, 374 (9686), pp. 340-350.

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The Lancet

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0140-6736

Copyright date

2009

Available date

2009-08-03

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http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S014067360960249X

Language

en

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