4.6 Article

HiSeeker: Detecting High-Order SNP Interactions Based on Pairwise SNP Combinations

Journal

GENES
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes8060153

Keywords

genome-wide association studies; high-order SNP interactions; logistic regression model; ant colony optimization

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [61402378]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of CQ CSTC [cstc2016jcyjA0351]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China [2362015XK07, XDJK2016B009, XDJK2017D062]
  4. Chongqing Graduate Student Research Innovation Project [CYS16070]

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Detecting single nucleotide polymorphisms' (SNPs) interaction is one of the most popular approaches for explaining the missing heritability of common complex diseases in genome-wide association studies. Many methods have been proposed for SNP interaction detection, but most of them only focus on pairwise interactions and ignore high-order ones, which may also contribute to complex traits. Existing methods for high-order interaction detection can hardly handle genome-wide data and suffer from low detection power, due to the exponential growth of search space. In this paper, we proposed a flexible two-stage approach (called HiSeeker) to detect high-order interactions. In the screening stage, HiSeeker employs the chi-squared test and logistic regression model to efficiently obtain candidate pairwise combinations, which have intermediate or significant associations with the phenotype for interaction detection. In the search stage, two different strategies (exhaustive search and ant colony optimization-based search) are utilized to detect high-order interactions from candidate combinations. The experimental results on simulated datasets demonstrate that HiSeeker can more efficiently and effectively detect high-order interactions than related representative algorithms. On two real case-control datasets, HiSeeker also detects several significant high-order interactions, whose individual SNPs and pairwise interactions have no strong main effects or pairwise interaction effects, and these high-order interactions can hardly be identified by related algorithms.

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