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Disentangling Pooled Triad Genotypes for Association Studies
Author(s) -
Shi Min,
Umbach David M.,
Weinberg Clarice R.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
annals of human genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.537
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1469-1809
pISSN - 0003-4800
DOI - 10.1111/ahg.12073
Subject(s) - genotyping , pooling , biology , genotype , offspring , genetics , type i and type ii errors , expectation–maximization algorithm , statistics , genetic association , allele , population , computer science , mathematics , maximum likelihood , gene , medicine , artificial intelligence , pregnancy , single nucleotide polymorphism , environmental health
Summary Association studies that genotype affected offspring and their parents (triads) offer robustness to genetic population structure while enabling assessments of maternal effects, parent‐of‐origin effects, and gene‐by‐environment interaction. We propose case‐parents designs that use pooled DNA specimens to make economical use of limited available specimens. One can markedly reduce the number of genotyping assays required by randomly partitioning the case‐parent triads into pooling sets of h triads each and creating three pools from every pooling set, one pool each for mothers, fathers, and offspring. Maximum‐likelihood estimation of relative risk parameters proceeds via log‐linear modeling using the expectation‐maximization algorithm. The approach can assess offspring and maternal genetic effects and accommodate genotyping errors and missing genotypes. We compare the power of our proposed analysis for testing offspring and maternal genetic effects to that based on a difference approach and that of the gold standard based on individual genotypes, under a range of allele frequencies, missing parent proportions, and genotyping error rates. Power calculations show that the pooling strategies cause only modest reductions in power if genotyping errors are low, while reducing genotyping costs and conserving limited specimens.

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