15.2 Genetic Variation and Individual Uniqueness

While examples like sickle-cell anemia, emphysema, and HIV susceptibility show that genetic variation in some genes has important effects on phenotypes, most of the genetic variation in populations is neutral or has no obvious effects. Much of the neutral variation consists of differences in noncoding DNA. Nonetheless, this variation can be revealed by direct studies of DNA that employ many of the techniques for DNA manipulation described in Chapter 12.