Multifactor-Dimensionality Reduction Versus Family-Based Association Tests in Detecting Susceptibility Loci in Discordant Sib-Pair Studies

Date
2005-12-30
Authors
Meng, Yan
Ma, Qianli
Yu, Yi
Farrell, John
Farrer, Lindsay A.
Wilcox, Marsha A.
Version
OA Version
Citation
Meng, Yan, Qianli Ma, Yi Yu, John Farrell, Lindsay A Farrer, Marsha A Wilcox. "Multifactor-dimensionality reduction versus family-based association tests in detecting susceptibility loci in discordant sib-pair studies" BMC Genetics 6(Suppl 1):S146. (2005)
Abstract
Complex diseases are generally thought to be under the influence of multiple, and possibly interacting, genes. Many association methods have been developed to identify susceptibility genes assuming a single-gene disease model, referred to as single-locus methods. Multilocus methods consider joint effects of multiple genes and environmental factors. One commonly used method for family-based association analysis is implemented in FBAT. The multifactor-dimensionality reduction method (MDR) is a multilocus method, which identifies multiple genetic loci associated with the occurrence of complex disease. Many studies of late onset complex diseases employ a discordant sib pairs design. We compared the FBAT and MDR in their ability to detect susceptibility loci using a discordant sib-pair dataset generated from the simulated data made available to participants in the Genetic Analysis Workshop 14. Using FBAT, we were able to identify the effect of one susceptibility locus. However, the finding was not statistically significant. We were not able to detect any of the interactions using this method. This is probably because the FBAT test is designed to find loci with major effects, not interactions. Using MDR, the best result we obtained identified two interactions. However, neither of these reached a level of statistical significance. This is mainly due to the heterogeneity of the disease trait and noise in the data.
Description
License
Copyright 2005 Meng et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.