Abstract

BackgroundDeciphering the genetic architecture of complex traits is still a major challenge for human genetics. In most cases, genome-wide association studies have only partially explained the heritability of traits and diseases. Epistasis, one potentially important cause of this missing heritability, is difficult to explore at the genome-wide level. Here, we develop and assess a tool based on interactive odds ratios (IOR), Fast Odds Ratio-based sCan for Epistasis (FORCE), as a novel approach for exhaustive genome-wide epistasis search. IOR is the ratio between the multiplicative term of the odds ratio (OR) of having each variant over the OR of having both of them. By definition, an IOR that significantly deviates from 1 suggests the occurrence of an interaction (epistasis). As the IOR is fast to calculate, we used the IOR to rank and select pairs of interacting polymorphisms for P value estimation, which is more time consuming.ResultsFORCE displayed power and accuracy similar to existing parametric and non-parametric methods, and is fast enough to complete a filter-free genome-wide epistasis search in a few days on a standard computer. Analysis of psoriasis data uncovered novel epistatic interactions in the HLA region, corroborating the known major and complex role of the HLA region in psoriasis susceptibility.ConclusionsOur systematic study revealed the ability of FORCE to uncover novel interactions, highlighted the importance of exhaustiveness, as well as its specificity for certain types of interactions that were not detected by existing approaches. We therefore believe that FORCE is a valuable new tool for decoding the genetic basis of complex diseases.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12863-015-0174-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Deciphering the genetic architecture of complex traits is still a major challenge for human genetics

  • We show that the restriction of FORCE to analyzing only certain Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) selected according to their marginal effect on psoriasis strongly limits the statistical significance of the results

  • FORCE enables exhaustive unfiltered epistasis analysis The FORCE method for epistasis detection is based on the choice of a dominant or recessive model that collapses combinations of allele counts into two 2×2 incidence tables

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Summary

Introduction

Deciphering the genetic architecture of complex traits is still a major challenge for human genetics. Genome-wide association studies have only partially explained the heritability of traits and diseases. We develop and assess a tool based on interactive odds ratios (IOR), Fast Odds Ratio-based sCan for Epistasis (FORCE), as a novel approach for exhaustive genome-wide epistasis search. Many tools have been developed for epistasis detection using various statistical methods [5,6], including those based on regression [7,8,9,10,11], linkage disequilibrium and haplotypes [12,13], and Bayesian approaches [14,15]. We present an approach that detects pairwise epistasis on a genome-wide scale based on the Grange et al BMC Genetics (2015) 16:11 classical interaction odds ratio (IOR). VanderWeele et al [22] showed how the use of IOR can help reveal mechanistic interactions in case-only datasets

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