Literature DB >> 24681889

The common occurrence of epistasis in the determination of human pigmentation and its impact on DNA-based pigmentation phenotype prediction.

Ewelina Pośpiech1, Anna Wojas-Pelc2, Susan Walsh3, Fan Liu4, Hitoshi Maeda5, Takaki Ishikawa6, Małgorzata Skowron2, Manfred Kayser4, Wojciech Branicki7.   

Abstract

The role of epistatic effects in the determination of complex traits is often underlined but its significance in the prediction of pigmentation phenotypes has not been evaluated so far. The prediction of pigmentation from genetic data can be useful in forensic science to describe the physical appearance of an unknown offender, victim, or missing person who cannot be identified via conventional DNA profiling. Available forensic DNA prediction systems enable the reliable prediction of several eye and hair colour categories. However, there is still space for improvement. Here we verified the association of 38 candidate DNA polymorphisms from 13 genes and explored the extent to which interactions between them may be involved in human pigmentation and their impact on forensic DNA prediction in particular. The model-building set included 718 Polish samples and the model-verification set included 307 independent Polish samples and additional 72 samples from Japan. In total, 29 significant SNP-SNP interactions were found with 5 of them showing an effect on phenotype prediction. For predicting green eye colour, interactions between HERC2 rs12913832 and OCA2 rs1800407 as well as TYRP1 rs1408799 raised the prediction accuracy expressed by AUC from 0.667 to 0.697 and increased the prediction sensitivity by >3%. Interaction between MC1R 'R' variants and VDR rs731236 increased the sensitivity for light skin by >1% and by almost 3% for dark skin colour prediction. Interactions between VDR rs1544410 and TYR rs1042602 as well as between MC1R 'R' variants and HERC2 rs12913832 provided an increase in red/non-red hair prediction accuracy from an AUC of 0.902-0.930. Our results thus underline epistasis as a common phenomenon in human pigmentation genetics and demonstrate that considering SNP-SNP interactions in forensic DNA phenotyping has little impact on eye, hair and skin colour prediction.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Forensic DNA phenotyping; Gene-gene interactions; Logistic regression; Multifactor dimensionality reduction; Pigmentation phenotype

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24681889     DOI: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2014.01.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Forensic Sci Int Genet        ISSN: 1872-4973            Impact factor:   4.882


  19 in total

1.  Assessment of IrisPlex-based multiplex for eye and skin color prediction with application to a Portuguese population.

Authors:  Paulo Dario; Helena Mouriño; Ana Rita Oliveira; Isabel Lucas; Teresa Ribeiro; Maria João Porto; Jorge Costa Santos; Deodália Dias; Francisco Corte Real
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2015-08-20       Impact factor: 2.686

Review 2.  Hybridization in human evolution: Insights from other organisms.

Authors:  Rebecca R Ackermann; Michael L Arnold; Marcella D Baiz; James A Cahill; Liliana Cortés-Ortiz; Ben J Evans; B Rosemary Grant; Peter R Grant; Benedikt Hallgrimsson; Robyn A Humphreys; Clifford J Jolly; Joanna Malukiewicz; Christopher J Percival; Terrence B Ritzman; Christian Roos; Charles C Roseman; Lauren Schroeder; Fred H Smith; Kerryn A Warren; Robert K Wayne; Dietmar Zinner
Journal:  Evol Anthropol       Date:  2019-06-20

3.  A study in scarlet: MC1R as the main predictor of red hair and exemplar of the flip-flop effect.

Authors:  Katerina Zorina-Lichtenwalter; Ryan N Lichtenwalter; Dima V Zaykin; Marc Parisien; Simon Gravel; Andrey Bortsov; Luda Diatchenko
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2019-06-15       Impact factor: 6.150

4.  Exploration of SNP variants affecting hair colour prediction in Europeans.

Authors:  Jens Söchtig; Chris Phillips; Olalla Maroñas; Antonio Gómez-Tato; Raquel Cruz; Jose Alvarez-Dios; María-Ángeles Casares de Cal; Yarimar Ruiz; Kristian Reich; Manuel Fondevila; Ángel Carracedo; María V Lareu
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2015-07-11       Impact factor: 2.686

5.  Variants of SCARB1 and VDR Involved in Complex Genetic Interactions May Be Implicated in the Genetic Susceptibility to Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma.

Authors:  Ewelina Pośpiech; Janusz Ligęza; Wacław Wilk; Aniela Gołas; Janusz Jaszczyński; Andrzej Stelmach; Janusz Ryś; Aleksandra Blecharczyk; Anna Wojas-Pelc; Jolanta Jura; Wojciech Branicki
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2015-04-06       Impact factor: 3.411

6.  Evaluation of DNA variants associated with androgenetic alopecia and their potential to predict male pattern baldness.

Authors:  Magdalena Marcińska; Ewelina Pośpiech; Sarah Abidi; Jeppe Dyrberg Andersen; Margreet van den Berge; Ángel Carracedo; Mayra Eduardoff; Anna Marczakiewicz-Lustig; Niels Morling; Titia Sijen; Małgorzata Skowron; Jens Söchtig; Denise Syndercombe-Court; Natalie Weiler; Peter M Schneider; David Ballard; Claus Børsting; Walther Parson; Chris Phillips; Wojciech Branicki
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-05-22       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  MC1R diversity in Northern Island Melanesia has not been constrained by strong purifying selection and cannot explain pigmentation phenotype variation in the region.

Authors:  Heather L Norton; Elizabeth Werren; Jonathan Friedlaender
Journal:  BMC Genet       Date:  2015-10-19       Impact factor: 2.797

8.  Latitudinal Clines of the Human Vitamin D Receptor and Skin Color Genes.

Authors:  Dov Tiosano; Laura Audi; Sharlee Climer; Weixiong Zhang; Alan R Templeton; Monica Fernández-Cancio; Ruth Gershoni-Baruch; José Miguel Sánchez-Muro; Mohamed El Kholy; Zèev Hochberg
Journal:  G3 (Bethesda)       Date:  2016-05-03       Impact factor: 3.154

9.  A probabilistic method for testing and estimating selection differences between populations.

Authors:  Yungang He; Minxian Wang; Xin Huang; Ran Li; Hongyang Xu; Shuhua Xu; Li Jin
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2015-10-13       Impact factor: 9.043

10.  An Unexpectedly Complex Architecture for Skin Pigmentation in Africans.

Authors:  Alicia R Martin; Meng Lin; Julie M Granka; Justin W Myrick; Xiaomin Liu; Alexandra Sockell; Elizabeth G Atkinson; Cedric J Werely; Marlo Möller; Manjinder S Sandhu; David M Kingsley; Eileen G Hoal; Xiao Liu; Mark J Daly; Marcus W Feldman; Christopher R Gignoux; Carlos D Bustamante; Brenna M Henn
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2017-11-30       Impact factor: 41.582

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