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Feasible and Successful: Genome-Wide Interaction Analysis Involving All 1.9 × 1011 Pair-Wise Interaction Tests

Authors :
Rolf Fimmers
Tim Becker
Markus M. Nöthen
Thomas Sander
Christine Herold
Max P. Baur
Bastian Bohn
Costin Leu
Sven Cichon
Thomas F. Wienker
Michael Steffens
Michael Griebel
Thomas Gerstner
Stefan Herms
Daniela A. Holler
Source :
Human Heredity. 69:268-284
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
S. Karger AG, 2010.

Abstract

The Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) is the study design of choice for detecting common genetic risk factors for multifactorial diseases. The performance of full Genome-Wide Interaction Analyses (GWIA) has always been considered computationally challenging. Two-stage strategies to reduce the amount of numerical analysis require the detection of single marker effects or prior pathophysiological hypotheses before the analysis of interaction. This prevents the detection of pure epistatic effects. Our case-control study in idiopathic generalized epilepsy demonstrates that a full GWIA is feasible through use of data compression, specific data representation, interleaved data organization, and parallelization of the analysis on a multi-processor system. Following extensive quality control of the genotypes, our final list of top interaction hits contains only pairs of interacting SNPs with negligible marginal effects. The TOP HIT interaction was between a SNP-pair intragenic to gene DNER (chr 2) and gene CTNNA3 (chr 10). Both of these genes are functionally involved in neuronal migration, synaptogenesis, and the formation of neuronal circuits. Our results therefore indicate a possible interaction between these two genes in epileptogenesis. Results from GWAS are beginning to reveal a ‘missing heritability’ in complex traits and diseases. Systematic, hypothesis-free analysis of epistatic interaction (GWIA) may help to close this increasingly recognized gap in heritability.

Details

ISSN :
14230062 and 00015652
Volume :
69
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Heredity
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........288d2b4bbd02e2b7ba53ecbe8ea47d48
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000295896