Home » Psychology news » New methods detect subtleties in human genomes’ repetitive landscapes: Techniques spot minute variations linked to evolution, diversity and brain development
New methods detect subtleties in human genomes’ repetitive landscapes: Techniques spot minute variations linked to evolution, diversity and brain development
October 27, 2010 by NewsBot
Scientists have invented techniques to scout human genome regions where DNA sequences are highly identical and heavily duplicated. They are able to identify subtle but important differences among people in the number and content of repeated DNA segments. The researchers found some 44 hidden members of duplicated gene families never before identified in reference models of the human genome. Duplications may have contributed to human evolution and to genomic instability associated with diseases like intellectual disability, schizophrenia and autism.