HomeUncategorizedGenome-wide association study of CNVs in 16,000 cases of eight common diseases and 3,000 shared controls Genome-wide association study of CNVs in 16,000 cases of eight common diseases and 3,000 shared controls March 31, 2010 / Copy Number Variation, Publications A new paper that I contributed has been recently published in Nature. This paper is a thorough examination of association of thousands of common CNVs to disease. You can reach the full text of the article here. Related news New paper: Different Neanderthal ancestors June 2, 2020 / Ancient DNA, Copy Number Variation, Publications Ozgur Taskent led this elegant study on the history of Neanderthal introgressions into the human gene pool. We added to the growing lines of evidence… Paper in PNAS – Structural Variation in Zebrafish Genome December 29, 2011 / Copy Number Variation, Evolution, Publications I have had the opportunity to work on the evolutionary aspects of the extensive copy number variation observed among several zebrafish strains. I am pleased… A highly annotated whole-genome sequence of a Korean individual July 9, 2009 / Copy Number Variation, Genetic Anthropology, Publications I was a part of a large group of people that characterized, in very fine detail, the genome of a Korean individual. I think this…
New paper: Different Neanderthal ancestors June 2, 2020 / Ancient DNA, Copy Number Variation, Publications Ozgur Taskent led this elegant study on the history of Neanderthal introgressions into the human gene pool. We added to the growing lines of evidence…
Paper in PNAS – Structural Variation in Zebrafish Genome December 29, 2011 / Copy Number Variation, Evolution, Publications I have had the opportunity to work on the evolutionary aspects of the extensive copy number variation observed among several zebrafish strains. I am pleased…
A highly annotated whole-genome sequence of a Korean individual July 9, 2009 / Copy Number Variation, Genetic Anthropology, Publications I was a part of a large group of people that characterized, in very fine detail, the genome of a Korean individual. I think this…