A new way to find genetic variations removes bias from human genotyping

Four people standing in a row with a string of As, Ts, Cs, and Gs illuminated on their shirts.

Since the first sequencing of a human genome more than 20 years ago, the study of human genomes has relied almost exclusively on a single reference genome to which others are compared to identify genetic variations. Scientists have long recognized that a single reference genome cannot represent human diversity and that using it introduces a pervasive bias into these studies.

Now, they finally have a practical alternative.

In a paper published December 16 in Science, researchers at the UC Santa Cruz Genomics Institute have introduced a new tool, called Giraffe, that can efficiently map new genome sequences to a “pangenome” representing many diverse human genome sequences. They show that this approach allows a more comprehensive characterization of genetic variations and can improve the genomic analyses used by a wide range of researchers and clinicians.

Read the full article in the UC Santa Cruz Newscenter

Last modified: Aug 19, 2024