Abstract

BackgroundGenomic screens generally employ a single-locus strategy for linkage analysis, but this may have low power in the presence of epistasis. Ordered subsets analysis (OSA) is a method for conditional linkage analysis using continuous covariates.MethodsWe used OSA to evaluate two-locus interactions in the simulated Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 dataset. We used all nuclear families ascertained by Aipotu, Karangar, and Danacaa. Using the single-nucleotide polymorphism map, multipoint affected-sibling-pair (ASP) linkage analysis was performed on all 100 replicates for each chromosome using SIBLINK. OSA was used to examine linkage on each chromosome using LOD scores at each 3-cM location on every other chromosome as covariates. Two methods were used to identify positive results: one searching across the entire covariate chromosome, the other conditioning on location of known disease loci.ResultsSingle-locus linkage analysis revealed very high LOD scores for disease loci D1 through D4, with mean LOD scores over 100 replicates ranging from 4.0 to 7.8. Although OSA did not obscure this linkage evidence, it did not detect the simulated interactions between any of the locus pairs. We found inflated type I error rates using the first OSA method, highlighting the need to correct for multiple comparisons. Therefore, using "null chromosome pairs" without simulated disease loci, we calculated a corrected alpha-level.ConclusionWe were unable to detect two-locus interactions using OSA. This may have been due to lack of incorporation of phenotypic subgroups, or because linkage evidence as summarized by LOD scores performs poorly as an OSA covariate. We found inflated type I error rates, but were able to calculate a corrected alpha-level for future analyses employing this strategy to search for two-locus interactions.

Highlights

  • Genomic screens generally employ a single-locus strategy for linkage analysis, but this may have low power in the presence of epistasis

  • Genomic screens such as those simulated for the Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 (GAW14) dataset generally employ a "single-locus" search for linkage, in which linkage to a particular marker or set of markers is considered independently from any other locus

  • When evidence for linkage at a second locus is used as the covariate, the method tests whether there is a statistically significant increase in linkage evidence at the first locus conditional on evidence at the second locus

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Summary

Introduction

Genomic screens generally employ a single-locus strategy for linkage analysis, but this may have low power in the presence of epistasis. Ordered subsets analysis (OSA) is a method for conditional linkage analysis using continuous covariates Genomic screens such as those simulated for the Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 (GAW14) dataset generally employ a "single-locus" search for linkage, in which linkage to a particular marker or set of markers is considered independently from any other locus. Such an approach is quite effective for detecting linkage to loci with strong effects, but may have low power in the presence of epistatic or heterogeneous effects. Empirical p-values generated by simulation have been used to evaluate results of conditional linkage analysis [3,4]

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