Association studies for quantitative traits in structured populations
- 7 December 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Genetic Epidemiology
- Vol. 22 (1) , 78-93
- https://doi.org/10.1002/gepi.1045
Abstract
Association between disease and genetic polymorphisms often contributes critical information in our search for the genetic components of common diseases. Devlin and Roeder [1999: Biometrics 55:997–1004] introduced genomic control, a statistical method that overcomes a drawback to the use of population-based samples for tests of association, namely spurious associations induced by population structure. In essence, genomic control (GC) uses markers throughout the genome to adjust for any inflation in test statistics due to substructure. To date, genomic control (GC) has been developed for binary traits and bi- or multiallelic markers. Tests of association using GC have been limited to single genes. In this report, we generalize GC to quantitative traits (QT) and multilocus models. Using statistical analysis and simulations, we show that GC controls spurious associations in reasonable settings of population substructure for QT models, including gene-gene interaction. Through simulations, we explore GC power for both random and selected samples, assuming the QT locus tested is causal and its specific heritability is 2.5–5%. We find that GC, combined with either random or selected samples, has good power in this setting, and that more complex models induce smaller GC corrections. The latter suggests greater power can be achieved by specifying more complex genetic models, but this observation only follows when such models are largely correct and specified a priori. Genet. Epidemiol. 22:78–93, 2002.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Unbiased methods for population‐based association studiesGenetic Epidemiology, 2001
- Genomic Control, a New Approach to Genetic-Based Association StudiesTheoretical Population Biology, 2001
- Evaluation of Candidate Genes in Case-Control Studies: A Statistical Method to Account for Related SubjectsAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2001
- Complexity and Power in Case-Control Association StudiesAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2001
- 12 Variance component methods for detecting complex trait lociPublished by Elsevier ,2001
- Transmission/disequilibrium tests for quantitative traitsGenetic Epidemiology, 2000
- Linkage Disequilibrium Analysis of Biallelic DNA Markers, Human Quantitative Trait Loci, and Threshold-Defined Case and Control SubjectsAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2000
- The Power of Genomic ControlAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2000
- Genomic Control for Association StudiesBiometrics, 1999
- THE GENETICAL STRUCTURE OF POPULATIONSAnnals of Eugenics, 1949