The GenoChip: A New Tool for Genetic Anthropology
Eran Elhaik, Elliott Greenspan, Sean Staats, Thomas Krahn, Chris, Tyler-Smith, Yali Xue, Sergio Tofanelli, Paolo Francalacci, Francesco Cucca,, Luca Pagani, Li Jin, Hui Li, Theodore G. Schurr, Bennett Greenspan, R., Spencer Wells, and the Genographic Consortium

TL;DR
The GenoChip is a specialized genotyping array designed for genetic anthropology, enabling detailed analysis of human migration and population structure without medically relevant markers, validated across diverse populations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel genotyping array tailored for anthropology, with extensive AIMs and ancestral markers, avoiding medical markers and validated for population studies.
Findings
GenoChip contains over 130,000 SNPs from autosomes and X-chromosome.
It effectively distinguishes subpopulations with high FST values.
Validated across multiple populations, outperforming commercial arrays in population differentiation.
Abstract
The Genographic Project is an international effort using genetic data to chart human migratory history. The project is non-profit and non-medical, and through its Legacy Fund supports locally led efforts to preserve indigenous and traditional cultures. In its second phase, the project is focusing on markers from across the entire genome to obtain a more complete understanding of human genetic variation. Although many commercial arrays exist for genome-wide SNP genotyping, they were designed for medical genetic studies and contain medically related markers that are not appropriate for global population genetic studies. GenoChip, the Genographic Project's new genotyping array, was designed to resolve these issues and enable higher-resolution research into outstanding questions in genetic anthropology. We developed novel methods to identify AIMs and genomic regions that may be enriched…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForensic and Genetic Research · Race, Genetics, and Society · Molecular Biology Techniques and Applications
