4.8 Article

Estimating direct and indirect genetic effects on offspring phenotypes using genome-wide summary results data

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25723-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Government
  2. UK Biobank Resource [53641]
  3. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council [1137714, 1157714]
  4. Jacobs foundation
  5. ZonMW grants from Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development [849200011, 531003014]
  6. VENI grant by NWO [VI.Veni.191G.030]
  7. Ideas Grant [1183074]
  8. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1157714, 1137714] Funding Source: NHMRC

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Estimation of direct and indirect genetic effects on phenotypes is crucial for genetic analyses, and Genomic SEM outperforms other methods in accurately estimating conditional genetic effects. By applying Genomic SEM to fertility data, researchers successfully partition genetic effects and identify a novel locus for fertility, as well as genetic correlations with other traits.
Estimation of direct and indirect (i.e. parental and/or sibling) genetic effects on phenotypes is becoming increasingly important. We compare several multivariate methods that utilize summary results statistics from genome-wide association studies to determine how well they estimate direct and indirect genetic effects. Using data from the UK Biobank, we contrast point estimates and standard errors at individual loci compared to those obtained using individual level data. We show that Genomic structural equation modelling (SEM) outperforms the other methods in accurately estimating conditional genetic effects and their standard errors. We apply Genomic SEM to fertility data in the UK Biobank and partition the genetic effect into female and male fertility and a sibling specific effect. We identify a novel locus for fertility and genetic correlations between fertility and educational attainment, risk taking behaviour, autism and subjective well-being. We recommend Genomic SEM be used to partition genetic effects into direct and indirect components when using summary results from genome-wide association studies. Estimating direct and indirect effects of genotypes on phenotypes is important for genetic analyses such as Mendelian randomization. Here the authors compare five different methods to estimate direct and indirect genetic effects using summary results statistics that account for sample overlap.

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