Quantitative Trait Locus Study Design From an Information Perspective
- 1 May 2005
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 170 (1) , 447-464
- https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.104.038612
Abstract
We examine the efficiency of different genotyping and phenotyping strategies in inbred line crosses from an information perspective. This provides a mathematical framework for the statistical aspects of QTL experimental design, while guiding our intuition. Our central result is a simple formula that quantifies the fraction of missing information of any genotyping strategy in a backcross. It includes the special case of selectively genotyping only the phenotypic extreme individuals. The formula is a function of the square of the phenotype and the uncertainty in our knowledge of the genotypes at a locus. This result is used to answer a variety of questions. First, we examine the cost-information trade-off varying the density of markers and the proportion of extreme phenotypic individuals genotyped. Then we evaluate the information content of selective phenotyping designs and the impact of measurement error in phenotyping. A simple formula quantifies the information content of any combined phenotyping and genotyping design. We extend our results to cover multigenotype crosses, such as the F2 intercross, and multiple QTL models. We find that when the QTL effect is small, any contrast in a multigenotype cross benefits from selective genotyping in the same manner as in a backcross. The benefit remains in the presence of a second unlinked QTL with small effect (explaining 2 intercross incorporating selective genotyping and marker spacing is available from http://www.biostat.ucsf.edu/sen.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Selective Phenotyping for Increased Efficiency in Genetic Mapping StudiesGenetics, 2004
- Optimal two‐stage genotyping in population‐based association studiesGenetic Epidemiology, 2003
- Selective genotyping with a main trait and a correlated traitJournal of Animal Breeding and Genetics, 2001
- Concordance of Murine Quantitative Trait Loci for Salt-Induced Hypertension with Rat and Human LociGenomics, 2001
- The effects of selective genotyping on estimates of proportion of recombination between linked quantitative trait lociTheoretical and Applied Genetics, 1996
- Optimum spacing of genetic markers for determining linkage between marker loci and quantitative trait lociTheoretical and Applied Genetics, 1994
- Selective genotyping for determination of linkage between a marker locus and a quantitative trait locusTheoretical and Applied Genetics, 1992
- A simple regression method for mapping quantitative trait loci in line crosses using flanking markersHeredity, 1992
- Trait-based analyses for the detection of linkage between marker loci and quantitative trait loci in crosses between inbred linesTheoretical and Applied Genetics, 1987
- Assessing the accuracy of the maximum likelihood estimator: Observed versus expected Fisher informationBiometrika, 1978