1. Comparison of high-resolution human leukocyte antigen haplotype frequencies in different ethnic groups: Consequences of sampling fluctuation and haplotype frequency distribution tail truncation
- Author
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Evelyne Marry, Pierre-Antoine Gourraud, Alannah Tomich, Derek J. Pappas, and Federico Garnier
- Subjects
Immunology ,Population ,Datasets as Topic ,Sample (statistics) ,Biology ,Gene Frequency ,HLA Antigens ,Resampling ,Statistics ,Ethnicity ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Truncation (statistics) ,Registries ,education ,Selection Bias ,Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Haplotype ,Sampling (statistics) ,General Medicine ,Tissue Donors ,Haplotypes ,Sample size determination ,Sample Size ,Regression Analysis ,Haplotype estimation - Abstract
High-resolution haplotype frequency estimations and descriptive metrics are becoming increasingly popular for accurately describing human leukocyte antigen diversity. In this study, we compared sample sets of publically available haplotype frequencies from different populations to characterize the consequences of unequal sample size on haplotype frequency estimation. We found that for low samples sizes (a few thousand), haplotype frequencies were overestimated, affecting all descriptive metrics of the underlying distribution, such as most frequent haplotype, the number of haplotypes, and the mean/median frequency. This overestimation was a result of random sample fluctuation and truncation of the tail end of the frequency distribution that comprises the least frequent haplotypes. Finally, we simulated balanced datasets through resampling and contrasted the disparities of descriptive metrics among equal and unequal datasets. This simulation resulted in the global description of the most frequent human leukocyte antigen haplotypes worldwide.
- Published
- 2014