Abstract

BackgroundGenomic imprinting is an epigenetic mechanism that can lead to differential gene expression depending on the parent-of-origin of a received allele. While most studies on imprinting address its underlying molecular mechanisms or attempt at discovering genomic regions that might be subject to imprinting, few have focused on the amount of phenotypic variation contributed by such epigenetic process. In this report, we give a brief review of a one-locus imprinting model in a quantitative genetics framework, and provide a decomposition of the genetic variance according to this model. Analytical deductions from the proposed imprinting model indicated a non-negligible contribution of imprinting to genetic variation of complex traits. Also, we performed a whole-genome scan analysis on mouse body mass index (BMI) aiming at revealing potential consequences when existing imprinting effects are ignored in genetic analysis.Results10,021 SNP markers were used to perform a whole-genome single marker regression on mouse BMI using an additive and an imprinting model. Markers significant for imprinting indicated that BMI is subject to imprinting. Marked variance changed from 1.218 ×10−4 to 1.842 ×10−4 when imprinting was considered in the analysis, implying that one third of marked variance would be lost if existing imprinting effects were not accounted for. When both marker and pedigree information were used, estimated heritability increased from 0.176 to 0.195 when imprinting was considered.ConclusionsWhen a complex trait is subject to imprinting, using an additive model that ignores this phenomenon may result in an underestimate of additive variability, potentially leading to wrong inferences about the underlying genetic architecture of that trait. This could be a possible factor explaining part of the missing heritability commonly observed in genome-wide association studies (GWAS).

Highlights

  • Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic mechanism that can lead to differential gene expression depending on the parent-of-origin of a received allele

  • Significant markers and marked variance After data cleaning, 10,021 Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers were kept for the whole genome scan using methods described in the previous section

  • The latter suggests the markers are linked with imprinted genes or Quantitative trait loci (QTL)

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Summary

Introduction

Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic mechanism that can lead to differential gene expression depending on the parent-of-origin of a received allele. While most studies on imprinting address its underlying molecular mechanisms or attempt at discovering genomic regions that might be subject to imprinting, few have focused on the amount of phenotypic variation contributed by such epigenetic process. An epigenetic process, is the preferential or differential gene expression in a parent-of-origin fashion [1, 2]. In cases where gene expression is not completely repressed, the phenomenon is called partial, Hu et al BMC Genomics (2015) 16:576 imprinting), only the parent-offspring conflict hypothesis that relates imprinting to nutrient resources allocation of alleles with different parent-of-origin has been widely accepted [6, 7]. Studies of complex traits often aim at partitioning phenotypic variance into different components. The ratio between the additive genetic and the respectively) defines phenotypic the narrow vseanrisaencheesri(tσabA2iliatnyd(hσ2P2)., h2 is usually interpreted as the proportion of phenotypic variance explained by additive variance

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