Description

This tracks contains variants of individual genotypes, usually phased, from the projects Human Diversity Genome Project, Simons Genome Diversity Project, gnomad's HGDP+1000 Genomes callset, and the Mexico Biobank. The original release of 1000 Genomes has its own, separate track. Projects where the released variants are not phased can be found in the container track "Variant Frequencies".

Available on hg19 and hg38:

Available only on hg38:

Display Conventions

Full haplotype display: In "pack" mode, this track sorts the haplotypes. This can be useful for determining the similarity between the samples and inferring inheritance at a particular locus. Each sample's phased and/or homozygous genotypes are split into haplotypes, clustered by similarity around a central variant (in pink), and sorted for display by their position in the clustering tree. Click a variant to center on it. The tree (as space allows) is drawn in the label area next to the track image. Leaf clusters, in which all haplotypes are identical (at least for the variants used in clustering), are colored purple.

For a full description of how the display works, please see our Haplotype Display help page.

Data Access

MXB: Allele frequencies by geographical state and ancestry are available via the MexVar platform. Raw genotype data are available under controlled access at the EGA (Study: EGAS00001005797; Dataset: EGAD00010002361). For the VCFs, email andres.moreno@cinvestav.mx.

Methods

SGDP: The version used was https://sharehost.hms.harvard.edu/genetics/reich_lab/sgdp/vcf_variants/, merged with bcftools and lifted to hg38 with CrossMap.

Credits

MXB: We thank the Center for Research and Advanced Studies (Cinvestav) of Mexico for generating and providing the frequency data, the National Institute of Medical Sciences and Nutrition (INCMNSZ) for DNA extraction, and the Ministry of Health together with the National Institute of Public Health (INSP) for the design and implementation of the National Health Survey 2000 (ENSA 2000). We also thank the ENSA-Genomics Consortium for their contributions to sample collection and data processing that made possible the construction of the MXB genomic resource.

SGDP: This project was funded by the Simons Foundation. Thanks to David Reich and Swapan Mallick for help with importing the data.

References

Barberena-Jonas C, Medina-Muñoz SG, Cedillo-Castelán V, Sepúlveda-Morales T, Gonzaga-Jáuregui C, ENSA Genomics Consortium, García-García L, Ioannidis AG, Moreno-Estrada A. Clinical genetic variation across Hispanic populations in the Mexican Biobank. Nat Med. 2026 Jan 21;. DOI: 10.1038/s41591-025-04100-z; PMID: 41566040

Sohail M, Moreno-Estrada A. The Mexican Biobank Project promotes genetic discovery, inclusive science and local capacity building. Dis Model Mech. 2024 Jan 1;17(1). PMID: 38299665; PMC: PMC10855211

Sohail M, Palma-Martínez MJ, Chong AY, Quinto-Corés CD, Barberena-Jonas C, Medina-Muñoz SG, Ragsdale A, Delgado-Sánchez G, Cruz-Hervert LP, Ferreyra-Reyes L et al. Mexican Biobank advances population and medical genomics of diverse ancestries. Nature. 2023 Oct;622(7984):775-783. PMID: 37821706; PMC: PMC10600006

Bergström A, McCarthy SA, Hui R, Almarri MA, Ayub Q, Danecek P, Chen Y, Felkel S, Hallast P, Kamm J et al. Insights into human genetic variation and population history from 929 diverse genomes. Science. 2020 Mar 20;367(6484). PMID: 32193295; PMC: PMC7115999

Koenig Z, Yohannes MT, Nkambule LL, Zhao X, Goodrich JK, Kim HA, Wilson MW, Tiao G, Hao SP, Sahakian N et al. A harmonized public resource of deeply sequenced diverse human genomes. Genome Res. 2024 Jun 25;34(5):796-809. PMID: 38749656; PMC: PMC11216312

Mallick S, Li H, Lipson M, Mathieson I, Gymrek M, Racimo F, Zhao M, Chennagiri N, Nordenfelt S, Tandon A et al. The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 genomes from 142 diverse populations. Nature. 2016 Oct 13;538(7624):201-206. PMID: 27654912; PMC: PMC5161557