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Using Network Methodology to Infer Population Substructure
Author(s) -
Dmitry Prokopenko,
Julian Hecker,
Edwin K. Silverman,
Markus M. Nöthen,
Matthias Schmid,
Christoph Lange,
Heide Fier
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0130708
Subject(s) - pairwise comparison , population , population stratification , covariate , computer science , 1000 genomes project , data mining , merge (version control) , principal component analysis , artificial intelligence , biology , machine learning , genetics , information retrieval , demography , sociology , genotype , single nucleotide polymorphism , gene
One of the main caveats of association studies is the possible affection by bias due to population stratification. Existing methods rely on model-based approaches like structure and ADMIXTURE or on principal component analysis like EIGENSTRAT. Here we provide a novel visualization technique and describe the problem of population substructure from a graph-theoretical point of view. We group the sequenced individuals into triads, which depict the relational structure, on the basis of a predefined pairwise similarity measure. We then merge the triads into a network and apply community detection algorithms in order to identify homogeneous subgroups or communities, which can further be incorporated as covariates into logistic regression. We apply our method to populations from different continents in the 1000 Genomes Project and evaluate the type 1 error based on the empirical p-values. The application to 1000 Genomes data suggests that the network approach provides a very fine resolution of the underlying ancestral population structure. Besides we show in simulations, that in the presence of discrete population structures, our developed approach maintains the type 1 error more precisely than existing approaches.

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