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Posterior probability of linkage analysis of autism dataset identifies linkage to chromosome 16

Authors :
Thomas H. Wassink
Christopher W. Bartlett
Val C. Sheffield
Joseph Piven
Rhinda Goedken
Veronica J. Vieland
Deborah Childress
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University Libraries, 2008.

Abstract

To apply phenotypic and statistical methods designed to account for heterogeneity to linkage analyses of the autism Collaborative Linkage Study of Autism (CLSA) affected sibling pair families.The CLSA contains two sets of 57 families each; Set 1 has been analyzed previously, whereas this study presents the first analyses of Set 2. The two sets were analyzed independently, and were further split based on the degree of phrase speech delay in the siblings. Linkage analysis was carried out using the posterior probability of linkage (PPL), a Bayesian statistic that provides a mathematically rigorous mechanism for combining linkage evidence across multiple samples.Two-point PPLs from Set 1 led to the follow-up genotyping of 18 markers around linkage peaks on 1q, 13p, 13q, 16q, and 17q in both sets of families. Multipoint PPLs were then calculated for the entire CLSA sample. These analyses identified four regions with at least modest evidence in support of linkage: 1q at 173 cM, PPL=0.12; 13p at 21 cM, PPL=0.16; 16q at 63 cM, PPL=0.36; Xq at 40 cM, PPL=0.11.We find strengthened evidence for linkage of autism to chromosomes 1q, 13p, 16q, and Xq, and diminished evidence for linkage to 7q and 13q. The verity of these findings will be tested by continuing to update our PPL analyses with data from additional autism datasets.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd08f9b9226332fd8b0e9f340cd218f2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17615/m4ch-0e35