128 research outputs found

    xploring Genetic Interactions: from Tools Development with Massive Parallelization on GPGPU to Multi-Phenotype Studies on Dyslexia

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    Over a decade, genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have provided insightful information into the genetic architecture of complex traits. However, the variants found by GWASs explain just a small portion of heritability. Meanwhile, as large scale GWASs and meta-analyses of multiple phenotypes are becoming increasingly common, there is a need to develop computationally efficient models/tools for multi-locus studies and multi-phenotype studies. Thus, we were motivated to focus on the development of tools serving for epistatic studies and to seek for analysis strategy jointly analyzed multiple phenotypes. By exploiting the technical and methodological progress, we developed three R packages. SimPhe was built based on the Cockerham epistasis model to simulate (multiple correlated) phenotype(s) with epistatic effects. Another two packages, episcan and gpuEpiScan, simplified the calculation of EPIBALSTER and epiHSIC and were implemented with high performance, especially the package based on Graphics Processing Unit (GPU). The two packages can be employed by epistasis detection in both case-control studies and quantitative trait studies. Our packages might help drive down costs of computation and increase innovation in epistatic studies. Moreover, we explored the gene-gene interactions on developmental dyslexia, which is mainly characterized by reading problems in children. Multivariate meta-analysis was performed on genome-wide interaction study (GWIS) for reading-related phenotypes in the dyslexia dataset, which contains nine cohorts from different locations. We identified one genome-wide significant epistasis, rs1442415 and rs8013684, associated with word reading, as well as suggestive genetic interactions which might affect reading abilities. Except for rs1442415, which has been reported to influence educational attainment, the genetic variants involved in the suggestive interactions have shown associations with psychiatric disorders in previous GWASs, particularly with bipolar disorder. Our findings suggest making efforts to investigate not just the genetic interactions but also multiple correlated psychiatric disorders

    On quantitative issues pertaining to the detection of epistatic genetic architectures

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    Converging empirical evidence portrays epistasis (i.e., gene-gene interaction) as a ubiquitous property of genetic architectures and protagonist in complex trait variability. While researchers employ sophisticated technologies to detect epistasis, the scarcity of robust instances of detection in human populations is striking. To evaluate the empirical issues pertaining to epistatic detection, we analytically characterize the statistical detection problem and elucidate two candidate explanations. The first examines whether population-level manifestations of epistasis arising in nature are small; consequently, for sample-sizes employed in research, the power delivered by detectors may be disadvantageously small. The second considers whether gene-environmental association generates bias in estimates of genotypic values diminishing the power of detection. By simulation study, we adjudicate the merits of both explanations and the power to detect epistasis under four digenic architectures. In agreement with both explanations, our findings implicate small epistatic effect-sizes and gene-environmental association as mechanisms that obscure the detection of epistasis

    고차원 유전체 자료에서의 유전자-유전자 상호작용 분석

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    학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 협동과정 생물정보학전공, 2015. 2. 박태성.With the development of high-throughput genotyping and sequencing technology, there are growing evidences of association with genetic variants and common complex traits. In spite of thousands of genetic variants discovered, such genetic markers have been shown to explain only a very small proportion of the underlying genetic variance of complex traits. Gene-gene interaction (GGI) analysis and rare variant analysis is expected to unveil a large portion of unexplained heritability of complex traits. In GGI, there are several practical issues. First, in order to conduct GGI analysis with high-dimensional genomic data, GGI methods requires the efficient computation and high accuracy. Second, it is hard to detect GGI for rare variants due to its sparsity. Third, analysing GGI using genome-wide scale suffers from a computational burden as exploring a huge search space. It requires much greater number of tests to find optimal GGI. For k variants, we have k(k-1)/2 combinations for two-order interactions, and nCk combinations for n-order interactions. The number of possible interaction models increase exponentially as the interaction order increases or the number of variant increases. Forth, though the biological interpretation of GGI is important, it is hard to interpret GGI due to its complex manner. In order to overcome these four main issues in GGI analysis with high-dimensional genomic data, the four novel methods are proposed. First, to provide efficient GGI method, we propose IGENT, Information theory-based GEnome-wide gene-gene iNTeraction method. IGENT is an efficient algorithm for identifying genome-wide GGI and gene-environment interaction (GEI). For detecting significant GGIs in genome-wide scale, it is important to reduce computational burden significantly. IGENT uses information gain (IG) and evaluates its significance without resampling. Through our simulation studies, the power of the IGENT is shown to be better than or equivalent to that of that of BOOST. The proposed method successfully detected GGI for bipolar disorder in the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (WTCCC) and age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Second, for GGI analysis of rare variants, we propose a new gene-gene interaction method in the framework of the multifactor dimensionality reduction (MDR) analysis. The proposed method consists of two steps. The first step is to collapse the rare variants in a specific region such as gene. The second step is to perform MDR analysis for the collapsed rare variants. The proposed method is applied in whole exome sequencing data of Korean population to identify causal gene-gene interaction for rare variants for type 2 diabetes (T2D). Third, to increase computational performance for GGI in genome-wide scale, we developed CUDA (Compute Unified Device Architecture) based genome-wide association MDR (cuGWAM) software using efficient hardware accelerators. cuGWAM has better performance than CPU-based MDR methods and other GPU-based methods through our simulation studies. Fourth, to efficiently provide the statistical interpretation and biological evidences of gene-gene interactions, we developed the VisEpis, a tool for visualizing of gene-gene interactions in genetic association analysis and mapping of epistatic interaction to the biological evidence from public interaction databases. Using interaction network and circular plot, the VisEpis provides to explore the interaction network integrated with biological evidences in epigenetic regulation, splicing, transcription, translation and post-translation level. To aid statistical interaction in genotype level, the VisEpis provides checkerboard, pairwise checkerboard, forest, funnel and ring chart.Abstract i Contents iv List of Figures viii List of Tables xi 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Background of high-dimensional genomic data 1 1.1.1 History of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) 1 1.1.2 Association studies of massively parallel sequencing (MPS) 3 1.1.3 Missing heritability and proposed alternative methods 6 1.2 Purpose and novelty of this study 7 1.3 Outline of the thesis 8 2 Overview of gene-gene interaction 9 2.1 Definition of gene-gene interaction 9 2.2 Practical issues of gene-gene interaction 12 2.3 Overview of gene-gene interaction methods 14 2.3.1 Regression-based gene-gene interaction methods 14 2.3.2 Multifactor dimensionality reduction (MDR) 15 2.3.3 Gene-gene interaction methods using machine learning methods 18 2.3.3 Entropy-based method gene-gene interaction methods 20 3 Entropy-based Gene-gene interaction 22 3.1 Introduction 22 3.2 Methods 23 3.2.1 Entropy-based gene-gene interaction analysis 23 3.2.2 Exhaustive searching approach and Stepwise selection approach 24 3.2.3 Simulation setting 27 3.2.4 Genome-wide data for Biopolar disorder (BD) 31 3.2.5 Genome-wide data for Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) 31 3.3 Results 33 3.3.1 Simulation results 33 3.3.2 Analysis of WTCCC bipolar disorder (BD) data 43 3.3.3 Analysis of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) data 44 3.4 Discussion 47 3.5 Conclusion 47 4 Gene-gene interaction for rare variants 48 4.1 Introduction 48 4.2 Methods 50 4.2.1 Collapsing-based gene-gene interaction 50 4.2.2 Simulation setting 50 4.3 Results 55 4.3.1 Simulation study 55 4.3.2 Real data analysis of the Type 2 diabetes data 55 4.4 Discussion and Conclusion 68 5 Computation enhancement for gene-gene interaction 5.1 Introduction 69 5.2 Methods 71 5.2.1 MDR implementation 71 5.2.2 Implementation using high-performance computation based on GPU 72 5.2.3 Environment of performance comparison 75 5.3 Results 76 5.3.1 Computational improvement 76 5.4 Discussion 84 5.5 Conclusion 87 6 Visualization for gene-gene interaction interpretation 88 6.1 Introduction 88 6.2 Methods 91 6.2.1 Interaction mapping procedure 91 6.2.1 Checker board plot 91 6.2.2 Forest and funnel plot 94 6.3 Case study 100 6.3.1 Interpretation of gene-gene interaction in WTCC bipolar disorder data 100 6.3.2 Interpretation of gene-gene interaction in Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) data 101 6.4 Conclusion 102 7 Summary and Conclusion 103 Bibliography 107 Abstract (Korean) 113Docto

    Dissecting genetic interactions in complex traits

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    Of central importance in the dissection of the components that govern complex traits is understanding the architecture of natural genetic variation. Genetic interaction, or epistasis, constitutes one aspect of this, but epistatic analysis has been largely avoided in genome wide association studies because of statistical and computational difficulties. This thesis explores both issues in the context of two-locus interactions. Initially, through simulation and deterministic calculations it was demonstrated that not only can epistasis maintain deleterious mutations at intermediate frequencies when under selection, but that it may also have a role in the maintenance of additive variance. Based on the epistatic patterns that are evolutionarily persistent, and the frequencies at which they are maintained, it was shown that exhaustive two dimensional search strategies are the most powerful approaches for uncovering both additive variance and the other genetic variance components that are co-precipitated. However, while these simulations demonstrate encouraging statistical benefits, two dimensional searches are often computationally prohibitive, particularly with the marker densities and sample sizes that are typical of genome wide association studies. To address this issue different software implementations were developed to parallelise the two dimensional triangular search grid across various types of high performance computing hardware. Of these, particularly effective was using the massively-multi-core architecture of consumer level graphics cards. While the performance will continue to improve as hardware improves, at the time of testing the speed was 2-3 orders of magnitude faster than CPU based software solutions that are in current use. Not only does this software enable epistatic scans to be performed routinely at minimal cost, but it is now feasible to empirically explore the false discovery rates introduced by the high dimensionality of multiple testing. Through permutation analysis it was shown that the significance threshold for epistatic searches is a function of both marker density and population sample size, and that because of the correlation structure that exists between tests the threshold estimates currently used are overly stringent. Although the relaxed threshold estimates constitute an improvement in the power of two dimensional searches, detection is still most likely limited to relatively large genetic effects. Through direct calculation it was shown that, in contrast to the additive case where the decay of estimated genetic variance was proportional to falling linkage disequilibrium between causal variants and observed markers, for epistasis this decay was exponential. One way to rescue poorly captured causal variants is to parameterise association tests using haplotypes rather than single markers. A novel statistical method that uses a regularised parameter selection procedure on two locus haplotypes was developed, and through extensive simulations it can be shown that it delivers a substantial gain in power over single marker based tests. Ultimately, this thesis seeks to demonstrate that many of the obstacles in epistatic analysis can be ameliorated, and with the current abundance of genomic data gathered by the scientific community direct search may be a viable method to qualify the importance of epistasis

    DeepWAS: multivariate genotype-phenotype associations by directly integrating regulatory information using deep learning

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    Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) identify genetic variants associated with traits or diseases. GWAS never directly link variants to regulatory mechanisms. Instead, the functional annotation of variants is typically inferred by post hoc analyses. A specific class of deep learning-based methods allows for the prediction of regulatory effects per variant on several cell type-specific chromatin features. We here describe "DeepWAS", a new approach that integrates these regulatory effect predictions of single variants into a multivariate GWAS setting. Thereby, single variants associated with a trait or disease are directly coupled to their impact on a chromatin feature in a cell type. Up to 61 regulatory SNPs, called dSNPs, were associated with multiple sclerosis (MS, 4,888 cases and 10,395 controls), major depressive disorder (MDD, 1,475 cases and 2,144 controls), and height (5,974 individuals). These variants were mainly non-coding and reached at least nominal significance in classical GWAS. The prediction accuracy was higher for DeepWAS than for classical GWAS models for 91% of the genome-wide significant, MS-specific dSNPs. DSNPs were enriched in public or cohort-matched expression and methylation quantitative trait loci and we demonstrated the potential of DeepWAS to generate testable functional hypotheses based on genotype data alone. DeepWAS is available at https://github.com/cellmapslab/DeepWAS

    DeepWAS: Multivariate genotype-phenotype associations by directly integrating regulatory information using deep learning

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    Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) identify genetic variants associated with traits or diseases. GWAS never directly link variants to regulatory mechanisms. Instead, the functional annotation of variants is typically inferred by post hoc analyses. A specific class of deep learning-based methods allows for the prediction of regulatory effects per variant on several cell type-specific chromatin features. We here describe \textquotedblDeepWAS\textquotedbl, a new approach that integrates these regulatory effect predictions of single variants into a multivariate GWAS setting. Thereby, single variants associated with a trait or disease are directly coupled to their impact on a chromatin feature in a cell type. Up to 61 regulatory SNPs, called dSNPs, were associated with multiple sclerosis (MS, 4,888 cases and 10,395 controls), major depressive disorder (MDD, 1,475 cases and 2,144 controls), and height (5,974 individuals). These variants were mainly non-coding and reached at least nominal significance in classical GWAS. The prediction accuracy was higher for DeepWAS than for classical GWAS models for 91% of the genome-wide significant, MS-specific dSNPs. DSNPs were enriched in public or cohort-matched expression and methylation quantitative trait loci and we demonstrated the potential of DeepWAS to generate testable functional hypotheses based on genotype data alone. DeepWAS is available at https://github.com/cellmapslab/DeepWAS

    Robust Computational Tools for Multiple Testing with Genetic Association Studies

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    Resolving the interplay of the genetic components of a complex disease is a challenging endeavor. Over the past several years, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have emerged as a popular approach at locating common genetic variation within the human genome associated with disease risk. Assessing genetic-phenotype associations upon hundreds of thousands of genetic markers using the GWAS approach, introduces the potentially high number of false positive signals and requires statistical correction for multiple hypothesis testing. Permutation tests are considered the gold standard for multiple testing correction in GWAS, because they simultaneously provide unbiased Type I error control and high power. However, they demand heavy computational effort, especially with large-scale data sets of modern GWAS. In recent years, the computational problem has been circumvented by using approximations to permutation tests, but several studies have posed sampling conditions in which these approximations are suggestive to be biased. We have developed an optimized parallel algorithm for the permutation testing approach to multiple testing correction in GWAS, whose implementation essentially abates the computational problem. When introduced to GWAS data, our algorithm yields rapid, precise, and powerful multiplicity adjustment, many orders of magnitude faster than existing employed GWAS statistical software. Although GWAS have identified many potentially important genetic associations which will advance our understanding of human disease, the common variants with modest effects on disease risk discovered through this approach likely account for a small proportion of the heritability in complex disease. On the other hand, interactions between genetic and environmental factors could account for a substantial proportion of the heritability in a complex disease and are overlooked within the GWAS approach. We have developed an efficient and easily implemented tool for genetic association studies, whose aim is identifying genes involved in a gene-environment interaction. Our approach is amenable to a wide range of association studies and assorted densities in sampled genetic marker panels, and incorporates resampling for multiple testing correction. Within the context of a case-control study design we demonstrate by way of simulation that our proposed method offers greater statistical power to detect gene-environment interaction, when compared to several competing approaches to assess this type of interaction

    A flexible and parallelizable approach to genome-wide polygenic risk scores.

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    The heritability of most complex traits is driven by variants throughout the genome. Consequently, polygenic risk scores, which combine information on multiple variants genome-wide, have demonstrated improved accuracy in genetic risk prediction. We present a new two-step approach to constructing genome-wide polygenic risk scores from meta-GWAS summary statistics. Local linkage disequilibrium (LD) is adjusted for in Step 1, followed by, uniquely, long-range LD in Step 2. Our algorithm is highly parallelizable since block-wise analyses in Step 1 can be distributed across a high-performance computing cluster, and flexible, since sparsity and heritability are estimated within each block. Inference is obtained through a formal Bayesian variable selection framework, meaning final risk predictions are averaged over competing models. We compared our method to two alternative approaches: LDPred and lassosum using all seven traits in the Welcome Trust Case Control Consortium as well as meta-GWAS summaries for type 1 diabetes (T1D), coronary artery disease, and schizophrenia. Performance was generally similar across methods, although our framework provided more accurate predictions for T1D, for which there are multiple heterogeneous signals in regions of both short- and long-range LD. With sufficient compute resources, our method also allows the fastest runtimes
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