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Simulation of Finnish population history, guided by empirical genetic data, to assess power of rare-variant tests in Finland

Authors :
Mark A. DePristo
Gil McVean
Jacquelyn Murphy
Kyle J. Gaulton
Jasmina Kravic
Martin Hrabé de Angelis
Noël P. Burtt
Ryan Poplin
Jeff Chen
Peter S. Chines
Tiinamaija Toumi
David Buck
Khalid Shakir
Pierre Fontanillas
Richard N. Bergman
Neil Robertson
Leif Groop
Tim M. Strom
Martina Müller-Nurasyid
Loukas Moutsianas
Christian Fuchsberger
Charleston W. K. Chiang
Thomas Meitinger
Jennifer Kriebel
Richard D. Pearson
Christa Meisinger
Gonçalo R. Abecasis
Jaakko Tuomilehto
Ashok Kumar
Janina S. Ried
Anubha Mahajan
Andrew T. Hattersley
Adam E. Locke
Wolfgang Rathmann
Inga Prokopenko
Adrian Tan
Annette Peters
Lori L. Bonnycastle
Andrew D. Morris
Christopher Hartl
Peter Donnelly
Vineeta Agarwala
Will Rayner
Jason Flannick
Timothy M. Frayling
Cornelia Huth
Martijn van de Bunt
David Altshuler
Harald Grallert
Stacey Gabriel
Michael Boehnke
Laura J. Scott
Tim D. Spector
Thomas W. Blackwell
Heather M. Stringham
Phoenix Kwan
Alisa Manning
Tanya M. Teslovich
Sophie R. Wang
Jeroen R. Huyghe
Francis S. Collins
Kerrin S. Small
Cecilia M. Lindgren
Gerton Lunter
Mark I. McCarthy
Joel N. Hirschhorn
Timothy Fennell
Todd Green
Clement Ma
Manny Rivas
Claes Ladenvall
Bo Isomaa
Anne U. Jackson
Hyun Min Kang
Eric Banks
Michael L. Stitzel
Xueling Sim
John R. B. Perry
Bryan Howie
Konstantin Strauch
Goo Jun
Karen L. Mohlke
Christian Gieger
Source :
Am. J. Hum. Genet. 94, 710-720 (2014)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Finnish samples have been extensively utilized in studying single-gene disorders, where the founder effect has clearly aided in discovery, and more recently in genome-wide association studies of complex traits, where the founder effect has had less obvious impacts. As the field starts to explore rare variants' contribution to polygenic traits, it is of great importance to characterize and confirm the Finnish founder effect in sequencing data and to assess its implications for rare-variant association studies. Here, we employ forward simulation, guided by empirical deep resequencing data, to model the genetic architecture of quantitative polygenic traits in both the general European and the Finnish populations simultaneously. We demonstrate that power of rare-variant association tests is higher in the Finnish population, especially when variants' phenotypic effects are tightly coupled with fitness effects and therefore reflect a greater contribution of rarer variants. SKAT-O, variable-threshold tests, and single-variant tests are more powerful than other rare-variant methods in the Finnish population across a range of genetic models. We also compare the relative power and efficiency of exome array genotyping to those of high-coverage exome sequencing. At a fixed cost, less expensive genotyping strategies have far greater power than sequencing; in a fixed number of samples, however, genotyping arrays miss a substantial portion of genetic signals detected in sequencing, even in the Finnish founder population. As genetic studies probe sequence variation at greater depth in more diverse populations, our simulation approach provides a framework for evaluating various study designs for gene discovery.

Details

ISSN :
15376605
Volume :
94
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....755ef00a55bea6460c600013b66aded3