Literature DB >> 30263053

Genome-wide association study for multiple phenotype analysis.

Xuan Deng1, Biqi Wang1, Virginia Fisher1, Gina Peloso1, Adrienne Cupples1, Ching-Ti Liu1.   

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies often collect multiple phenotypes for complex diseases. Multivariate joint analyses have higher power to detect genetic variants compared with the marginal analysis of each phenotype and are also able to identify loci with pleiotropic effects. We extend the unified score-based association test to incorporate family structure, apply different approaches to analyze multiple traits in GAW20 real samples, and compare the results. Through simulation studies, we confirm that the Type I error rate of the pedigree-based unified score association test is appropriately controlled. In marginalanalysis of triglyceride levels, we found 1 subgenome-wide significant variant on chromosome 6. Joint analyses identified several suggestive genome-wide significant signals, with the pedigree-based unified score association test yielding the greatest number of significant results.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 30263053      PMCID: PMC6156845          DOI: 10.1186/s12919-018-0135-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Proc        ISSN: 1753-6561


Background

The increasing availability of high-density genomic data with thousands of samples enables the identification of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) contributing to complex traits on a genome-wide scale. Research studies often collect data on multiple related phenotypes to better understand disease structure; however, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) commonly analyze each trait independently. For example, body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) are both proxy traits for obesity and commonly collected in an obesity-related study. The standard approach usually analyzes each phenotype separately and reports the corresponding findings of each analysis, ignoring the dependency among traits. Approaches considering joint analyses have been proposed to tackle multiple phenotypes. Yang and Wang [1] and Ott and Wang [2] described a number of approaches elaborately, including multivariate regression models, variable reduction methods such as principal component analysis, and canonical correlation analysis. However, there is no single approach that is uniformly the most powerful across all situations. The sum of squared score (SSU) test does not explicitly incorporate trait correlation, and multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) could fail to detect pleiotropy when a strong trait correlation exists and the traits have thesame direction of association [3]. Considered to be an optimally weighted combination of MANOVA and SSU, the unified score-based association test (USAT) by Ray et al. [3] may provide higher power, especially for detecting pleiotropy. We aimed to study the performance of various approaches for jointly analyzing multiple phenotypes. We first reviewed existing methods. We then expanded USAT to related samples as a pedigree-based USAT (pUSAT). We found that the Type I error rate of pUSATwas well preserved through simulations. Finally, we analyzed GAW20real data using multiple phenotype methods and compared the results.

Methods

Assume K correlated phenotypes Y1,…, Y in N individuals. Let be the N × 1 vector of k phenotype and be the N × K matrix for all individuals. The test of interest is the association of a single variant with the K phenotypes. Suppose G is the genotype score (ie, count of the minor allele as 0, 1, or 2) for a SNP of interest i, and is the N × 1 vector of genotypes for all individuals. Moreover, define  = (c1, …, c) as the N × q matrix of a set of q-adjusted covariates for all samples.

Marginal linear mixed model

The linear mixed model (LMM) is frequently used to account for the sample relatedness or the cryptic relatedness due to population structure. For a given SNP, the standard LMM is:where α refers to the overall mean of k phenotype, β is the regression coefficient representing the linear fixed genetic effect on the k phenotype, and γ is a q × 1 vector of fixed covariate effects on the k phenotype. Q and ϵ are random effect and error, respectively, assumed to follow normal distributions and , where and are genetic and environmental components of variance, is an N × N identity matrix and Φ is an N × N matrix of pairwise measures of genetic relatedness.To handle multiple phenotypes, the most intuitive and simplest approach is to implement marginal LMM to test each SNP against 1 phenotype at a time. For the k marginal model, the null hypothesis is that the given SNP is not associated with the k phenotype (H0 : β = 0). The estimation of parameters can be obtained through the maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) or the restricted MLE (RMLE) [4], and test statistics are constructed thereafter. Because multiple tests are conducted for each SNP, a modification of local significance level should be used to control the overall Type I error, such as Bonferroni correction. The marginal LMM completely ignores the correlation among traits, possibly reducing power, especially in the case of highly correlated phenotypes.

SSU test

The results from the marginal test can be combined to simultaneously test the association of a given SNP to the multiple phenotypes. Yang and Wang [1] extended Pan’s [5] test statistic for the association between multiple rare or common variants and a single phenotype, and developed the well-known approach of the SSU test. The SSU test statistic is:where t is the association statistic for the k phenotype with a given marker from a marginal model, for example, from eq. (1). The distribution of eq. (2) can be approximated as a scaled noncentral chi-squared distribution withwhere c’s are the eigenvalues of the variance–covariance matrix Σ of t [6]. The SSU test is derived from marginal modelsand does not consider the correlation structure explicitly; therefore, the power is not highly affected by increasing the degree of dependency among the traits. However, the SSU test suffers from power loss with a small proportion of associated traits.

Multivariate linear mixed model

MANOVA considers the trait correlation directly in the test statistics and corresponding distributions [7]. For family data, the multivariate LMM (mvLMM) has been developed as a compelling method for testing multiple phenotypes. An mvLMM for the association of K phenotypes and a given SNP is:where is a K × 1 vector of the SNP genetic effect sizes for the K phenotypes; is an q × K matrix of the corresponding coefficients for the covariates; Q is an N × K matrix of random effects with MVN distribution ~MVN(0, , ), where Φ is the row covariance matrix for relatedness, is the K × K column covariance matrix for the genetic variance component; is an N × K matrix of errors with MVN(0, , ), where is the row covariance matrix, and is the K × K column covariance matrix of the environmental variance component. The null hypothesis of interest is that the SNP effect sizes for all phenotypes are zero: H0 : β1 = … = β = 0. These parameters can be estimated through either MLE or RMLE [8]. The mvLMM typically has good performance when a few of phenotypes are associated with a SNP, but lacks power with high correlations among traits and the genetic effect sizes of the traits are similar in magnitude and in same direction.

USAT and pUSAT

The true genetic sizes and the direction of associations are usually unknown a priori and therefore one would not know which approach is the best for the study. Ray et al. [3] proposed the USAT approach, which combinesMANOVA and SSU. USAT takes the advantages of MANOVA and SSU while not requiring the prior knowledge of true effect sizes or correlations among traits. The method was originally designed for independent samples. Let T be the weighted statistic T = wT + (1 − w)T, where w is a weight from 0 to 1, T is the MANOVA test statistic, and T is the SSU test statistic combining the marginal results. T and T are the statistics from the analyses assuming the independence among samples. Under the null, T is approximately a linear combination of chi-squared distributions and the p value p of T can be calculated using Liu et al. [6]. The optimal USAT test statistic is:and w can be considered from a grid of {w1 = 0, w2 = 0.1, …, w11 = 1}. Here, we expand their method to related samples. Specifically, we define the proposed pUSAT as T = wT + (1 − w)T, where T is the mvLMM test statistic, and T is the SSU test statistic combining the marginal LMM results. In this way, the relatedness among study participants is taken into consideration in the test statistic. Then, the optimal pUSAT test statistic is defined as:where p is the p value of T. An approximated p value for T using numerical integration is [3]: where t is the observed value, q(w) is the (1- t)th percentile of the distribution of for w = w, is the cumulative distribution function of T, and is the probability density function of T. The details of this calculation can be found in Ray et al. [3]. The pUSAT is an application-directed approach and does not require knowledge of the underlying association. Weights to mvLMM can change according to the SNP being tested. pUSAT may be powerful in detecting pleiotropy for a large number of traits with weak correlation or a few of highly correlated phenotypes.

Phenotypic and genotypic data

GAW20 provides the dense genome-wide SNPs from the 821 pedigree-based individuals with triglyceride (TG) and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels measured. We used the log-transformed average of pretreatment values at visits 1 and 2 of TG and HDL-Clevels and investigated the pleiotropic variants involved in blood lipids. The GAW20 data has been genotyped using the Affymetrix Genome-wide Human SNP Array 6.0. SNPs were excluded with a call rate < 95%, minor allele frequency < 5%, and failure of the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium test (p value<10e-6), which results in a total of 587,358 variants. Individuals with more than 5% missing genotypes were also excluded from analysis.

Results

Simulation study

To evaluate Type I error rate of the proposed pUSAT approach, we conducted simulation studies considering 2 correlated phenotypes. The phenotype data were simulated from the following model:where   h2B(ρ),  = (1 − h2)E and h2 is the heritability varying from 0 to 1. For the genetic covariance matrix B(ρ) and the environmental covariance matrix E, we used acompound symmetry (CS) correlation structure with B(ρ)  E  ρ, where a single parameter ρ can control the model and define the correlation among the phenotypes. We used the kinship matrix Φ ofGAW20 data and considered h2 as 0.5%. The different correlation ρ ‘s (ρ = 0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75) were assessed in the simulation. We evaluated the Type I error rate using 1000 null phenotype data setssimulated from eq. (3) and variants on chromosome 21 fromGAW20 individuals, with minor allele frequencyvarying from 0.052 to 0.500. TheType I error rate is well controlled for the pUSAT approach (Table 1) although slightly conservative.
Table 1

Estimated Type I errors of pUSAT for K = 2 phenotypes (α = 0.0)

Type I errorCorrelation ρ
00.250.50.75
pUSAT0.0270.0320.0360.038
Estimated Type I errors of pUSAT for K = 2 phenotypes (α = 0.0)

Real data analysis

The Pearson correlation coefficient, ignoring the family structure, between TG and HDL-Clevels (on log-scale) in the data set, is − 0.45. The empirical genetic relatedness matrix was calculated before conducting analyses. Besides SSU, mvLMM, USAT, and pUSAT, the univariate analyses were also performed and shown. All statistical models were adjusted for age, sex, indicators of field center, and smoking status, and implemented in GEMMA (genome-wide efficient mixed-model analysis) [4, 8]. Table 2 lists the descriptive statistics for the variables used in the model.
Table 2

Descriptive statistics of variables in the analysis

Men(N = 407)Women(N = 414)Total(N = 821)
Log of TGa4.86 (0.59)4.70 (0.56)4.78 (0.58)
Log of HDL-Ca3.69 (0.23)3.92 (0.26)3.80 (0.27)
Agea48.29 (15.93)48.38 (15.84)48.34 (15.87)
Field centerbMinnesota206 (50.6%)205 (49.5%)411 (50%)
Utah201 (49.4%)209 (50.5%)410 (50%)
Smoking statusbNever Smoker268 (65.8%)298 (72.0%)566 (68.9%)
Past Smoker106 (26.0%)82 (19.8%)188 (22.9%)
Current Smoker33 (8.1%)34 (8.2%)67 (8.2%)

amean (SD); bcount (frequency)

Descriptive statistics of variables in the analysis amean (SD); bcount (frequency) Figure 1 shows the Manhattan plots for the univariate analysis using marginal LMM. The horizontal line indicates the subgenome-wide significance level (p value = 1 × 10− 7). We observed no genome-wide significant SNPs for either phenotype; however, we did identify1 subgenome-wide significant locus on chromosome 6 (rs17619780 with ap valueof 7.2 × 10− 8 in gene LRFN2) as associated with TG levels. LRFN2is related to TGs in the suggestive genome-wide significance level (p < 5 × 10− 6) [9]; however, more exploration of this gene is needed. Interestingly, the heterozygous deletion of the LRFN2 is reported to be associated with working memory deficits [10], a well-known complication of high TG levels. Furthermore, both USAT and pUSAT performed similarly (Table 3) except one genome-wide association (GWA)-significant variant, rs2880301, identified by the regular USAT. The reported p value of 1.69 × 10− 13 from USAT is suspicious as no other approach (neither univariate nor joint analysis) reports even nominal significance signal. In addition, USAT analysis ignored the dependency among the individuals, which could potentially lead to the inflated signals. In addition, we did not identify any signals that reached GWAsignificance by another multivariate approach (SSU, mvLMM, or pUSAT), as shown in Fig. 2. Some suggestive genome-wide significant signals were detected on chromosomes 4, 6, and 12. Most of the identified SNPs in Fig. 2 are in linkage disequilibrium, therefore, we kept 1SNP with the smallest p value as representative within ± 500 kb (Table 3). From Table 3, we found that the joint analysis is able to identify most variants that were significant in either marginal analysis and also catches 1 variant (rs7300117) missed in the univariate analysis, emphasizing the importance of multivariate joint analyses. pUSAT provides comparable results with slightly smaller p values by integrating information from SSU and mvLMM. Closer investigation shows that some SNPs are outstandingly noticeable for pUSAT, but not for SSUormvLMM, especially on chromosomes 2,3,4, and 6.
Fig. 1

Manhattan plots of the univariateanalyses (TG and HDL-C) for chromosomes 1 to 22. The black horizontal line indicated the subgenome-wide significance threshold (p value = 1 × 10− 7)

Table 3

SNPs that are suggestive as being of genome-wide significance (p < 5 × 10− 6) in univariate and joint analysis*

SNPChr:PosUnivariate analysis (LMM)Joint analysis
TGHDL-CSSUmvLMMUSATpUSAT
rs905131:31893443.33E-02 1.20E-06 1.30E-057.18E-062.36E-059.88E-06
rs119402324:1389533366.32E-051.98E-05 1.47E-06 8.56E-06 2.65E-06 2.58E-06
rs170588024:173880215 5.66E-07 4.56E-03 2.23E-06 3.39E-06 4.13E-06 2.60E-06
rs7080106:370713501.86E-04 4.69E-06 1.01E-06 5.48E-06 2.19E-06 2.12E-06
rs176197806:40472303 7.58E-08 2.22E-01 4.95E-06 1.59E-07 9.60E-06 3.01E-07
rs125335937:1474519666.69E-03 2.28E-06 7.72E-061.22E-051.48E-051.01E-05
rs730011712:1302665752.24E-058.66E-015.60E-04 3.92E-06 9.99E-048.58E-06
rs288030113:189985349.66E-017.29E-021.95E-011.19E-01 1.69E-13 2.22E-01
rs1746449922:262217153.20E-02 4.48E-06 3.02E-052.67E-056.30E-053.29E-05

*pValues of different approaches that reach suggestive genome-wide significance level are in bold

Fig. 2

Manhattan plots of the multivariateanalyses (SSU, mvLMM, USAT, and pUSAT) for chromosomes 1 to 22. The black horizontal line indicated the subgenome-wide significance threshold (p value = 1 × 10− 7)

Manhattan plots of the univariateanalyses (TG and HDL-C) for chromosomes 1 to 22. The black horizontal line indicated the subgenome-wide significance threshold (p value = 1 × 10− 7) SNPs that are suggestive as being of genome-wide significance (p < 5 × 10− 6) in univariate and joint analysis* *pValues of different approaches that reach suggestive genome-wide significance level are in bold Manhattan plots of the multivariateanalyses (SSU, mvLMM, USAT, and pUSAT) for chromosomes 1 to 22. The black horizontal line indicated the subgenome-wide significance threshold (p value = 1 × 10− 7)

Discussion and conclusions

The explosion in datacollection and the increasing evidence that some loci affect multiple traits require more complex statistical models for analyses to better understand the properties of association. Here, we reviewed several different methods for multiple phenotypes in GWAS, and expanded the USAT approach to related samples as pUSAT. The proposed method can provide insight into the underlying associations, and help the researchers to identify pleiotropic loci especially when prior information is unavailable. The simulation studies demonstrate that the Type I error rate of pUSAT is conservative under different correlations. We also applied various methods to the GAW20 data with TG and HDL-C as the phenotypes. One suspicious locus was identified as GWA-significant by the regular USAT, which assumes independent individuals, whereas other multivariate analyses missed this locus. Several suggestiveGWA loci were detected by the joint multivariate analyses; however, pUSAT highlights the importance of joint analysis for multiple phenotypes and yields smaller p values for most SNPs.
  8 in total

Review 1.  Multiple phenotypes in genome-wide genetic mapping studies.

Authors:  Jurg Ott; Jing Wang
Journal:  Protein Cell       Date:  2011-06-06       Impact factor: 14.870

2.  Heterozygous deletion of the LRFN2 gene is associated with working memory deficits.

Authors:  Julien Thevenon; Céline Souchay; Gail K Seabold; Inna Dygai-Cochet; Patrick Callier; Sébastien Gay; Lucie Corbin; Laurence Duplomb; Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Alice Masurel-Paulet; Salima El Chehadeh; Magali Avila; Delphine Minot; Eric Guedj; Sophie Chancenotte; Marlène Bonnet; Daphne Lehalle; Ya-Xian Wang; Paul Kuentz; Frédéric Huet; Anne-Laure Mosca-Boidron; Nathalie Marle; Ronald S Petralia; Laurence Faivre
Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet       Date:  2015-10-21       Impact factor: 4.246

3.  Asymptotic tests of association with multiple SNPs in linkage disequilibrium.

Authors:  Wei Pan
Journal:  Genet Epidemiol       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 2.135

4.  Methods for Analyzing Multivariate Phenotypes in Genetic Association Studies.

Authors:  Qiong Yang; Yuanjia Wang
Journal:  J Probab Stat       Date:  2012-05-01

5.  USAT: A Unified Score-Based Association Test for Multiple Phenotype-Genotype Analysis.

Authors:  Debashree Ray; James S Pankow; Saonli Basu
Journal:  Genet Epidemiol       Date:  2015-12-07       Impact factor: 2.135

6.  Genome-wide efficient mixed-model analysis for association studies.

Authors:  Xiang Zhou; Matthew Stephens
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2012-06-17       Impact factor: 38.330

7.  Novel genetic loci identified for the pathophysiology of childhood obesity in the Hispanic population.

Authors:  Anthony G Comuzzie; Shelley A Cole; Sandra L Laston; V Saroja Voruganti; Karin Haack; Richard A Gibbs; Nancy F Butte
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-12-14       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Efficient multivariate linear mixed model algorithms for genome-wide association studies.

Authors:  Xiang Zhou; Matthew Stephens
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2014-02-16       Impact factor: 28.547

  8 in total
  1 in total

1.  GWAS for main effects and epistatic interactions for grain morphology traits in wheat.

Authors:  Parveen Malik; Jitendra Kumar; Shiveta Sharma; Prabina Kumar Meher; Harindra Singh Balyan; Pushpendra Kumar Gupta; Shailendra Sharma
Journal:  Physiol Mol Biol Plants       Date:  2022-03-26
  1 in total

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