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A Fast Association Test for Identifying Pathogenic Variants Involved in Rare Diseases
Author(s) -
Daniel Greene,
Sylvia Richardson,
Ernest Turro
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the american journal of human genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.661
H-Index - 302
eISSN - 1537-6605
pISSN - 0002-9297
DOI - 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.05.015
Subject(s) - inference , genome wide association study , biology , genetics , computational biology , bayes' theorem , genetic association , context (archaeology) , locus (genetics) , bayesian probability , allele , computer science , single nucleotide polymorphism , gene , genotype , artificial intelligence , paleontology
We present a rapid and powerful inference procedure for identifying loci associated with rare hereditary disorders using Bayesian model comparison. Under a baseline model, disease risk is fixed across all individuals in a study. Under an association model, disease risk depends on a latent bipartition of rare variants into pathogenic and non-pathogenic variants, the number of pathogenic alleles that each individual carries, and the mode of inheritance. A parameter indicating presence of an association and the parameters representing the pathogenicity of each variant and the mode of inheritance can be inferred in a Bayesian framework. Variant-specific prior information derived from allele frequency databases, consequence prediction algorithms, or genomic datasets can be integrated into the inference. Association models can be fitted to different subsets of variants in a locus and compared using a model selection procedure. This procedure can improve inference if only a particular class of variants confers disease risk and can suggest particular disease etiologies related to that class. We show that our method, called BeviMed, is more powerful and informative than existing rare variant association methods in the context of dominant and recessive disorders. The high computational efficiency of our algorithm makes it feasible to test for associations in the large non-coding fraction of the genome. We have applied BeviMed to whole-genome sequencing data from 6,586 individuals with diverse rare diseases. We show that it can identify multiple loci involved in rare diseases, while correctly inferring the modes of inheritance, the likely pathogenic variants, and the variant classes responsible.

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