da8db0ef4336e7e3d39b1901d2259e50465f6d8c
donnak
  Thu Mar 6 16:03:38 2014 -0800
Modified info about Karen Miga's work, per input from Karen + Jim.
diff --git src/hg/htdocs/indexNews.html src/hg/htdocs/indexNews.html
index 5c3e4af..829a605 100755
--- src/hg/htdocs/indexNews.html
+++ src/hg/htdocs/indexNews.html
@@ -56,34 +56,36 @@
 	<li>
 	<b>Alternate sequences</b> - Several human chromosomal regions exhibit sufficient 
 	variability to prevent adequate representation by a single sequence. To address this, the 
 	GRCh38 assembly provides alternate sequence for selected variant regions through the 
 	inclusion of  <em>alternate loci scaffolds</em> (or <em>alt loci</em>). Alt loci are 
 	separate accessioned sequences that are aligned to reference chromosomes. This assembly 
 	contains 261 alt loci, many of which are associated with the LRC/KIR area of chr19 and the 
 	MHC region on chr6. (See the 
 	<a href="../cgi-bin/hgTracks?chromInfoPage=">sequences</a> page for a complete list of the 
 	reference chromosomes and alternate sequences in GRCh38.)
 	<li>
 	<b>Centromere representation</b> - Debuting in this release, the large megabase-sized gaps 
 	that were previously used to represent centromeric regions in human assemblies have been 
 	replaced by sequences from centromere models created by 
 	<a href="http://genome.cshlp.org/content/early/2014/02/05/gr.159624.113.abstract"
-	target="_blank">Karen Miga et al.</a> of UCSC's
-	<a href="http://cbse.soe.ucsc.edu/people/kent" target="_blank">Kent lab</a>, under the 
-	guidance and mentorship of the <a href="http://www.genome.duke.edu/labs/WillardLab/"
-	target="_blank">Willard lab</a> at Duke University. The models, which provide the 
+	target="_blank">Karen Miga et al.</a>, using centromere databases developed during her 
+	work in the <a href="http://www.genome.duke.edu/labs/WillardLab/" 
+	target="_blank">Willard lab</a> at 
+	Duke University and analysis software developed while working in the 
+	<a href="http://cbse.soe.ucsc.edu/people/kent" target="_blank">Kent lab</a> at UCSC.
+	The models, which provide the 
 	approximate repeat number and order for each centromere, will be useful for read mapping 
 	and variation studies. 
 	<li>
 	<b>Mitochondrial genome</b> - The mitochondrial reference sequence included in the GRCh38 
 	assembly and hg38 Genome Browser (termed &quot;chrM&quot; in the browser) is the 
 	<a href="http://mitomap.org/bin/view.pl/MITOMAP/HumanMitoSeq" 
 	target="_blank">Revised Cambridge Reference Sequence</a> (rCRS) from 
 	<a href="http://mitomap.org/MITOMAP" target="_blank">MITOMAP</a> with GenBank accession 
 	number J01415.2 and RefSeq accession number NC_012920.1. This differs from the chrM 
 	sequence (RefSeq accession number NC_001907) used by the previous hg19 Genome Browser, 
 	which was not updated when the GRCh37 assembly later transitioned to the new version.
 	<li>
 	<b>Sequence updates</b> - Several erroneous bases and misassembled regions in GRCh37 have 
 	been corrected in the GRCh38 assembly, and more than 100 gaps have been filled or reduced. 
 	Much of the data used to improve the reference sequence was obtained from other genome