Can SNP data alone be used to locate splice sites or is the full sequence needed? I have dense SNP data of 13 million SNPs from a mouse genome.

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You will likely have more success with this type of question on Biostar.

You will require full sequence to assess splice sites, assuming you are referring to intron-exon boundaries. A small proportion of your SNPs may lie in sequence that will alter the splicing boundaries but again that will require full sequence and full sequence annotation to determine.

If you are looking for novel data driven splice site annotation then your best source of experimental data is likely to be RNA-seq experiments.

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Thanks. Did not know of Biostar. I also found I can query for exon-intron locations on biomart – Kat Sep 1 '11 at 1:01
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I don't think you can use SNPs to identify splice sites. SNPs are single-base positions, while splice sites are at least two or three bases long.

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