Abstract

Studies of the relationship between DNA variation and gene expression variation, often referred to as “expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) mapping”, have been conducted in many species and resulted in many significant findings. Because of the large number of genes and genetic markers in such analyses, it is extremely challenging to discover how a small number of eQTLs interact with each other to affect mRNA expression levels for a set of co-regulated genes. We present a Bayesian method to facilitate the task, in which co-expressed genes mapped to a common set of markers are treated as a module characterized by latent indicator variables. A Markov chain Monte Carlo algorithm is designed to search simultaneously for the module genes and their linked markers. We show by simulations that this method is more powerful for detecting true eQTLs and their target genes than traditional QTL mapping methods. We applied the procedure to a data set consisting of gene expression and genotypes for 112 segregants of S. cerevisiae. Our method identified modules containing genes mapped to previously reported eQTL hot spots, and dissected these large eQTL hot spots into several modules corresponding to possibly different biological functions or primary and secondary responses to regulatory perturbations. In addition, we identified nine modules associated with pairs of eQTLs, of which two have been previously reported. We demonstrated that one of the novel modules containing many daughter-cell expressed genes is regulated by AMN1 and BPH1. In conclusion, the Bayesian partition method which simultaneously considers all traits and all markers is more powerful for detecting both pleiotropic and epistatic effects based on both simulated and empirical data.

Highlights

  • Studies in the genetics of gene expression combine gene expression and genotype data in segregating populations to detect loci linked to variations in RNA levels

  • We present a Bayesian method to identify genetic interactions and more expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) by treating co-expressed genes as a module

  • Our method provides a tool to study genetic interactions in human disease models

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Studies in the genetics of gene expression combine gene expression and genotype data in segregating populations to detect loci linked to variations in RNA levels. These loci are referred to as expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL). Despite the success of this type of regression approach, a number of challenging problems remain These methods can not assess the joint effect of multiple markers beyond additive effects. Storey et al [5] developed a step-wise regression method to find eQTL pairs, Zou and Zeng improved it [6] This procedure, tends to miss eQTL pairs with small marginal effects but a strong interaction effect. There are methods for detecting eptistatic effects without main marginal effects [7,8]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call