Methods for detecting gene × gene interaction in multiplex extended pedigrees
Open Access
- 30 December 2005
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Genomic Data
- Vol. 6 (S1) , S144-6
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2156-6-s1-s144
Abstract
Complex diseases are multifactorial in nature and can involve multiple loci with gene × gene and gene × environment interactions. Research on methods to uncover the interactions between those genes that confer susceptibility to disease has been extensive, but many of these methods have only been developed for sibling pairs or sibships. In this report, we assess the performance of two methods for finding gene × gene interactions that are applicable to arbitrarily sized pedigrees, one based on correlation in per-family nonparametric linkage scores and another that incorporates candidate loci genotypes as covariates into an affected relative pair linkage analysis. The power and type I error rate of both of these methods was addressed using the simulated Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 data. In general, we found detection of the interacting loci to be a difficult problem, and though we experienced some modest success there is a clear need to continue developing new methods and approaches to the problem.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Construction of the model for the Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 simulated data: genotype-phenotype relationships, gene interaction, linkage, association, disequilibrium, and ascertainment effects for a complex phenotypeBMC Genomic Data, 2005
- Affected-Sib-Pair Data Can Be Used to Distinguish Two-Locus Heterogeneity from Two-Locus EpistasisAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2003
- Score tests for epistasis models on quantitative traits using general pedigree dataGenetic Epidemiology, 2003
- Mathematical multi-locus approaches to localizing complex human trait genesNature Reviews Genetics, 2003
- Two-Locus Heterogeneity Cannot Be Distinguished from Two-Locus Epistasis on the Basis of Affected-Sib-Pair DataAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2003
- Epistasis: what it means, what it doesn't mean, and statistical methods to detect it in humansHuman Molecular Genetics, 2002
- Model-Free Linkage Analysis with Covariates Confirms Linkage of Prostate Cancer to Chromosomes 1 and 4American Journal of Human Genetics, 2001
- Haseman and Elston revisitedGenetic Epidemiology, 2000
- A General Conditional-Logistic Model for Affected-Relative-Pair Linkage StudiesAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1999
- Multipoint Quantitative-Trait Linkage Analysis in General PedigreesAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1998