4.3 Article

Trees Assembling Mann-Whitney Approach for Detecting Genome-Wide Joint Association Among Low-Marginal-Effect Loci

Journal

GENETIC EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages 84-91

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/gepi.21693

Keywords

Crohn's disease; high-dimensional data; joint association analysis

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [076113]
  2. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research [R03DE022379]

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Common complex diseases are likely influenced by the interplay of hundreds, or even thousands, of genetic variants. Converging evidence shows that genetic variants with low marginal effects (LMEs) play an important role in disease development. Despite their potential significance, discovering LME genetic variants and assessing their joint association on high-dimensional data (e.g., genome-wide data) remain a great challenge. To facilitate joint association analysis among a large ensemble of LME genetic variants, we proposed a computationally efficient and powerful approach, which we call Trees Assembling Mann-Whitney (TAMW). Through simulation studies and an empirical data application, we found that TAMW outperformed multifactor dimensionality reduction (MDR) and the likelihood ratio-based Mann-Whitney approach (LRMW) when the underlying complex disease involves multiple LME loci and their interactions. For instance, in a simulation with 20 interacting LME loci, TAMW attained a higher power (power = 0.931) than both MDR (power = 0.599) and LRMW (power = 0.704). In an empirical study of 29 known Crohn's disease (CD) loci, TAMW also identified a stronger joint association with CD than those detected by MDR and LRMW. Finally, we applied TAMW to Wellcome Trust CD GWAS to conduct a genome-wide analysis. The analysis of 459K single nucleotide polymorphisms was completed in 40 hrs using parallel computing, and revealed a joint association predisposing to CD (P-value = 2.763 x 10-19). Further analysis of the newly discovered association suggested that 13 genes, such as ATG16L1 and LACC1, may play an important role in CD pathophysiological and etiological processes.

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