A map of human genome sequence variation containing 1.42 million single nucleotide polymorphisms

2001 Nature 2,959 citations

Abstract

We describe a map of 1.42 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) distributed throughout the human genome, providing an average density on available sequence of one SNP every 1.9 kilobases. These SNPs were primarily discovered by two projects: The SNP Consortium and the analysis of clone overlaps by the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium. The map integrates all publicly available SNPs with described genes and other genomic features. We estimate that 60,000 SNPs fall within exon (coding and untranslated regions), and 85% of exons are within 5 kb of the nearest SNP. Nucleotide diversity varies greatly across the genome, in a manner broadly consistent with a standard population genetic model of human history. This high-density SNP map provides a public resource for defining haplotype variation across the genome, and should help to identify biomedically important genes for diagnosis and therapy.

Keywords

Single-nucleotide polymorphismGeneticsMolecular Inversion ProbeHuman genomedbSNPTag SNPBiologyGenomeHaplotypeReference genomeSNPSNP genotypingSNP arrayNucleotide diversityHuman genetic variationPopulationGenetic variationGeneGenotypeMedicine

MeSH Terms

Chromosome MappingGenetic VariationGeneticsMedicalGeneticsPopulationGenomeHumanHumansNucleotidesPolymorphismSingle Nucleotide

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Publication Info

Year
2001
Type
article
Volume
409
Issue
6822
Pages
928-933
Citations
2959
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2959
OpenAlex
3
Influential
2234
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Cite This

Ravi Sachidanandam, David B. Weissman, Steven C. Schmidt et al. (2001). A map of human genome sequence variation containing 1.42 million single nucleotide polymorphisms. Nature , 409 (6822) , 928-933. https://doi.org/10.1038/35057149

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/35057149
PMID
11237013

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%