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Kirill Rotmistrovsky

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  4
Citations -  2410

Kirill Rotmistrovsky is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genomics & Reference genome. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 2060 citations.

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Mapping copy number variation by population-scale genome sequencing

Ryan E. Mills, +374 more
- 03 Feb 2011 - 
TL;DR: A map of unbalanced SVs is constructed based on whole genome DNA sequencing data from 185 human genomes, integrating evidence from complementary SV discovery approaches with extensive experimental validations, and serves as a resource for sequencing-based association studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The status, quality, and expansion of the NIH full-length cDNA project: The Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC)

Daniela S. Gerhard, +118 more
- 01 Oct 2004 - 
TL;DR: Comparison of the sequence of the MGC clones to reference genome sequences reveals that most cDNA clones are of very high sequence quality, although it is likely that some cDNAs may carry missense variants as a consequence of experimental artifact, such as PCR, cloning, or reverse transcriptase errors.

A map of human genome variation from population-scale sequencing

Richard Durbin, +361 more
TL;DR: The pilot phase of the 1000 Genomes Project is presented, designed to develop and compare different strategies for genome-wide sequencing with high-throughput platforms, and the location, allele frequency and local haplotype structure of approximately 15 million single nucleotide polymorphisms, 1 million short insertions and deletions, and 20,000 structural variants are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

A web server for performing electronic PCR

TL;DR: The new software provides a search mode using a query STS against a sequence database to augment the previously available mode use a query sequence against an STS database, and may be used through a web service, with search results linked to other web resources such as the UniSTS database and the MapViewer genome browser.