Searching journal content for articles similar to Grundberg et al. 19 (11): 1942.

Displaying results 1-10 of 1821
For checked items
  1. ...bp (De Coster et al. 2019; Mahmoud et al. 2019). Nevertheless, SRS remains the workhorse of genomics, producing many of the whole- and whole-exome data sets to study rare and complex diseases. Although SRS can readily identify single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) associated with disease, it often fails...
  2. ...and behavior (Figiel et al. 2021). Large clutch sizes, ex utero development, and the availability of well-characterized fluorescent reporter lines allow straightforward enrichment of minor cell populations from dissociated embryos for functional genomic analysis. Transparency of embryos and larvae during early...
  3. ...and ultimately enable functional classification of regulatory variants identified by population studies.Most genetic associations with human diseases and traits lie within noncoding regulatory DNA (Maurano et al. 2012). Genome-scale methods to analyze the function of noncoding regulatory elements within...
  4. ...by highlighting its transformative potential and key hurdles, and emphasizing future opportunities for advancing the understanding of human genetic diversity and diseases through population-scale long-read analysis.The promise of long genomic reads for human population-scale studiesThe advent of long...
  5. ...motif lengths and a larger number of repeat copies (Fig. 2B; Supplemental Text).Long-read population references enable frequency estimates for rare SVs and TREsFor rare disease diagnosis, it is critical to determine which variants are rare in the population. For LR-GS SV, this is a major challenge...
  6. ...structure and the complex genetic architecture they reveal.To address these limitations, estimates of pairwise haplotypes shared identical-by-descent, or identity-by-descent (IBD), offer a more precise approach for detecting recent fine-scale population structure in large genomic data sets (Shemirani et al...
  7. ...Cell type–specific gene regulatory atlas prioritizes drug targets and repurposable medicines in Alzheimer's disease Yunxiao Ren1,2, Ming Hu3,4, Yang E. Li5, Andrew A. Pieper6,7,8,9,10,11, Jeffrey Cummings12 and Feixiong Cheng1,2,4,13 1Cleveland Clinic Genome Center, Cleveland Clinic Research...
  8. ...of Internal Medicine; Radboudumc Research Institute for Medical Innovation; Radboud Centre for Infectious Diseases (RCI); Radboud University Medical Center, 6525 GA Nijmegen, The Netherlands; 3Human Genome Sequencing Center, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030, USA; 4Department of Molecular...
  9. ...-resolved assemblies have become the norm in eukaryotic genomics with advances in long-read sequencing technologies. Complete assemblies are fundamental for addressing key questions in biology that were previously hidden in the “dark matter” of s. Key breakthroughs have revolved around centromeres and the embedded...
  10. ...-CHM13 reference thus facilitates enhanced discovery of new disease-causing variation, benefiting, for example, rare-disease diagnostics.The first draft of the human reference was published by the Human Genome Sequencing Consortium in 2001 (International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium 2001). Since...
For checked items

Preprint Server