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Genome-wide analysis of common and rare variants via multiple knockoffs at biobank scale, with an application to Alzheimer disease genetics.

Authors :
He, Zihuai
Le Guen, Yann
Liu, Linxi
Lee, Justin
Ma, Shiyang
Yang, Andrew C.
Liu, Xiaoxia
Rutledge, Jarod
Losada, Patricia Moran
Song, Bowen
Belloy, Michael E.
Butler III, Robert R.
Longo, Frank M.
Tang, Hua
Mormino, Elizabeth C.
Wyss-Coray, Tony
Greicius, Michael D.
Ionita-Laza, Iuliana
Source :
American Journal of Human Genetics. Dec2021, Vol. 108 Issue 12, p2336-2353. 18p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Knockoff-based methods have become increasingly popular due to their enhanced power for locus discovery and their ability to prioritize putative causal variants in a genome-wide analysis. However, because of the substantial computational cost for generating knockoffs, existing knockoff approaches cannot analyze millions of rare genetic variants in biobank-scale whole-genome sequencing and whole-genome imputed datasets. We propose a scalable knockoff-based method for the analysis of common and rare variants across the genome, KnockoffScreen-AL , that is applicable to biobank-scale studies with hundreds of thousands of samples and millions of genetic variants. The application of KnockoffScreen-AL to the analysis of Alzheimer disease (AD) in 388,051 WG-imputed samples from the UK Biobank resulted in 31 significant loci, including 14 loci that are missed by conventional association tests on these data. We perform replication studies in an independent meta-analysis of clinically diagnosed AD with 94,437 samples, and additionally leverage single-cell RNA-sequencing data with 143,793 single-nucleus transcriptomes from 17 control subjects and AD-affected individuals, and proteomics data from 735 control subjects and affected indviduals with AD and related disorders to validate the genes at these significant loci. These multi-omics analyses show that 79.1% of the proximal genes at these loci and 76.2% of the genes at loci identified only by KnockoffScreen-AL exhibit at least suggestive signal (p < 0.05) in the scRNA-seq or proteomics analyses. We highlight a potentially causal gene in AD progression, EGFR , that shows significant differences in expression and protein levels between AD-affected individuals and healthy control subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029297
Volume :
108
Issue :
12
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Human Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153783571
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.10.009