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  • Phase output blocks

  • See corresponding data for another gene
Haplotype Frequency Sort Order
Haplotype All Controls Cases
G
1097 56.7% 553 56.5% 544 56.8%
A
839 43.3% 425 43.5% 414 43.2%
Totals
1936 978 958

Haplotype Alphabetic Sort Order
Haplotype All Controls Cases
A
839 43.3% 425 43.5% 414 43.2%
G
1097 56.7% 553 56.5% 544 56.8%
Totals
1936 978 958

Minimal SNP (highlighted columns) needed to unambiguously distinguish haplotypes seen more than once, by population group
Please note that this an experimental resource which is still under test.Please email Ross Lazarus if you have comments or find any errors or anomalies

Minimal sets of haplotype tagging SNP for CCR3 in Cases

The following SNP are binary equivalent. Any one of them may be freely substituted for any of the others without any loss of ability to distinguish haplotypes:
SNP 1 may be substituted by any of 2

1 2 3 #
5 4 4 (544)
4 1 4 (414)
Legend:
  • Same allele as first row of the corresponding SNP column    
  • Variant allele:    

Minimal sets of haplotype tagging SNP for CCR3 in Controls

The following SNP are binary equivalent. Any one of them may be freely substituted for any of the others without any loss of ability to distinguish haplotypes:
SNP 1 may be substituted by any of 2, 3

1 2 3 #
5 5 3 (553)
4 2 5 (425)
Legend:
  • Same allele as first row of the corresponding SNP column    
  • Variant allele:    
The haplotypes shown above are comprised of alleles at the following SNP locations in the order show. The first column is the allele position in the haplotype. The SNP column is the SNP position in the reference sequence (1=first base). The RelativeOffset column is the SNP offset relative to the ATG start codon.
#SNPRelativeOffset
184000Unreliable
*
The PHASE software package was used to generate the contents of this output file. Custom written Python scripts (available on request) were used to create the input files for PHASE (from the raw data files in SeattleSNPs "prettybase" format available elsewhere on this site) and also to process the PHASE output into more useful formats. PHASE uses MCMC methods and is available from http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/mathgen/software.html . The results were obtained by running PHASE independently for each of the separate groups shown and amalgamating the results.
 
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