When is an SNP not an SNP?
Shapour JalilzadehValerie WalkerGary P LeggattEli HatchwellPublished in: BioTechniques (2024)
Genomic duplications are important sources of structural change and gene innovation. In humans, the most recent and highly identical sequences (>90% homology, >1 kb long) are known as segmental duplications (SDs). Single-nucleotide variants or single-nucleotide polymorphisms within SDs have not been systematically assessed due to limitations around mapping short-read sequencing data. Single-nucleotide variant rs62486260 was flagged in a study of familial renal stone disease but it was unclear whether it was real or an artifact resulting from the presence of a SD. We describe in silico and wet-lab approaches to investigate this, using segment-specific long-PCR assays, followed by short PCR for Sanger sequencing. Our conclusion was that rs62486260 is an artifact. Our approach can be generalized to deal with other such situations.
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