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A comparison of humans and baboons suggests germline mutation rates do not track cell divisions
View ORCID ProfileFelix L. Wu, Alva Strand, Carole Ober, Jeffrey D. Wall, Priya Moorjani, View ORCID ProfileMolly Przeworski
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/844910
Felix L. Wu
1Department of Systems Biology, Columbia University
2Integrated Program in Cellular, Molecular, and Biomedical Studies, Columbia University
Alva Strand
3Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University
4Department of Biology, University of Oklahoma and Oklahoma Biological Survey, University of Oklahoma
Carole Ober
5Department of Human Genetics, The University of Chicago
Jeffrey D. Wall
6Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco
7Institute for Human Genetics, University of California, San Francisco
Priya Moorjani
3Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University
8Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley and Center for Computational Biology, University of California, Berkeley
Molly Przeworski
1Department of Systems Biology, Columbia University
3Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University
Posted November 16, 2019.
A comparison of humans and baboons suggests germline mutation rates do not track cell divisions
Felix L. Wu, Alva Strand, Carole Ober, Jeffrey D. Wall, Priya Moorjani, Molly Przeworski
bioRxiv 844910; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/844910
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