Authors
Magnus Nordborg, Justin O Borevitz, Joy Bergelson, Charles C Berry, Joanne Chory, Jenny Hagenblad, Martin Kreitman, Julin N Maloof, Tina Noyes, Peter J Oefner, Eli A Stahl, Detlef Weigel
Publication date
2002/2
Journal
Nature genetics
Volume
30
Issue
2
Pages
190-193
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Linkage disequilibrium (LD), the nonrandom occurrence of alleles in haplotypes, has long been of interest to population geneticists. Recently, the rapidly increasing availability of genomic polymorphism data has fueled interest in LD as a tool for fine-scale mapping, in particular for human disease loci 1. The chromosomal extent of LD is crucial in this context, because it determines how dense a map must be for associations to be detected and, conversely, limits how finely loci may be mapped 2. Arabidopsis thaliana is expected to harbor unusually extensive LD because of its high degree of selfing 3. Several polymorphism studies have found very strong LD within individual loci, but also evidence of some recombination 4, 5, 6. Here we investigate the pattern of LD on a genomic scale and show that in global samples, LD decays within approximately 1 cM, or 250 kb. We also show that LD in local populations may be …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Nordborg, JO Borevitz, J Bergelson, CC Berry… - Nature genetics, 2002