Asked by Nyakoang jal gatbel
Genetic References
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Do you mean one of the following? Pick which you want (or give more detail) and I’ll provide tailored references.
Options I can prepare for you:
1. General textbooks and review articles on genetics (introductory & advanced reading lists).
2. Key databases and “reference genome” resources (RefSeq, Ensembl, UCSC, gnomAD, 1000 Genomes, ClinVar, dbSNP, OMIM, HGMD).
3. Standards and nomenclature for reporting variants (HGVS, ACMG/AMP variant-classification guidelines).
4. Reference panels and resources for population genetics and imputation (1000 Genomes, gnomAD, Haplotype Reference Consortium).
5. Tools and pipelines for annotation and variant interpretation (VEP, ANNOVAR, SnpEff, bcftools).
6. How to cite genetic data and accession numbers (GenBank/ENA/DDBJ accession best practices).
7. A formatted bibliography (APA/MLA/AMA) on a genetics subtopic you name (e.g., cancer genomics, population genetics, Mendelian disorders).
If you want option 2–6, tell me the intended audience (clinician, researcher, student) and whether you want primary literature links, reviews, or quick how-to resources. If you want a reading list, say the topic and level (beginner/advanced).
Options I can prepare for you:
1. General textbooks and review articles on genetics (introductory & advanced reading lists).
2. Key databases and “reference genome” resources (RefSeq, Ensembl, UCSC, gnomAD, 1000 Genomes, ClinVar, dbSNP, OMIM, HGMD).
3. Standards and nomenclature for reporting variants (HGVS, ACMG/AMP variant-classification guidelines).
4. Reference panels and resources for population genetics and imputation (1000 Genomes, gnomAD, Haplotype Reference Consortium).
5. Tools and pipelines for annotation and variant interpretation (VEP, ANNOVAR, SnpEff, bcftools).
6. How to cite genetic data and accession numbers (GenBank/ENA/DDBJ accession best practices).
7. A formatted bibliography (APA/MLA/AMA) on a genetics subtopic you name (e.g., cancer genomics, population genetics, Mendelian disorders).
If you want option 2–6, tell me the intended audience (clinician, researcher, student) and whether you want primary literature links, reviews, or quick how-to resources. If you want a reading list, say the topic and level (beginner/advanced).
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