| Literature DB >> 35886003 |
Shuang Song1, Hongyi Sun1, Jun S Liu2, Lin Hou1,3.
Abstract
Openness-weighted association study (OWAS) is a method that leverages the in silico prediction of chromatin accessibility to prioritize genome-wide association studies (GWAS) signals, and can provide novel insights into the roles of non-coding variants in complex diseases. A prerequisite to apply OWAS is to choose a trait-related cell type beforehand. However, for most complex traits, the trait-relevant cell types remain elusive. In addition, many complex traits involve multiple related cell types. To address these issues, we develop OWAS-joint, an efficient framework that aggregates predicted chromatin accessibility across multiple cell types, to prioritize disease-associated genomic segments. In simulation studies, we demonstrate that OWAS-joint achieves a greater statistical power compared to OWAS. Moreover, the heritability explained by OWAS-joint segments is higher than or comparable to OWAS segments. OWAS-joint segments also have high replication rates in independent replication cohorts. Applying the method to six complex human traits, we demonstrate the advantages of OWAS-joint over a single-cell-type OWAS approach. We highlight that OWAS-joint enhances the biological interpretation of disease mechanisms, especially for non-coding regions.Entities:
Keywords: aggregated Cauchy association test; chromatin accessibility; multiple cell types
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35886003 PMCID: PMC9323627 DOI: 10.3390/genes13071220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.141
Figure 1Schematic diagram of OWAS-joint. Cell-type-specific predictions of personalized chromosome accessibility and GWAS summary statistics are integrated via OWAS. OWAS-joint aggregates the OWAS results with single cell types via an aggregated Cauchy association test.
Figure 2The statistical power of OWAS-joint, OWAS applied with each of the three cell types, and a union of single-cell-type methods with Bonferroni correction. Both phenotype effects with high () and low () heritability were considered. The simulation settings 1, 2, and 3 correspond to one (Th1), two (Th1 and GM12878), and three causal cell types.
The number of segments and genes identified by OWAS-joint, the union of single-cell-type OWAS with 12 cell types, and the average number of single-cell-type OWAS. The standard deviations across 12 cell types are shown in brackets. The p-value cutoffs for the union of segment-level association tests were determined by Bonferroni correction. The largest numbers of identified signals are highlighted in boldface.
| Trait | # Identified Segments | # Identified Genes | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OWAS-Joint | Union (Bonferroni) | Single-Cell-Type OWAS | OWAS-Joint | Union (Bonferroni) | Single-Cell-Type OWAS | |
| CD |
| 2595 | 1138 (48) |
| 374 | 293 (13) |
| RA |
| 1558 | 659 (54) |
| 590 | 204 (16) |
| HT |
| 6308 | 2452 (111) |
| 944 | 776 (18) |
| PrCa |
| 1650 | 635 (32) |
| 293 | 213 (14) |
| HDL |
| 2944 | 1347 (41) |
| 1264 | 441 (23) |
| LDL |
| 2734 | 1196 (50) |
| 1219 | 399 (22) |
Figure 3Heritability () explained by OWAS-joint segments and single-cell-type OWAS segments. Varying p-value thresholds were considered. The error bars correspond to the standard error of the heritability estimated by GCTA software. The heritability was evaluated with the WTCCC individual-level genotype data. The red dashed lines mark the heritability explained by OWAS-joint segments.
Figure 4Replication rates of OWAS-joint results. OWAS-joint was performed with GWAS summary statistics on CD, RA, HT, PrCa, HD, and LDL from the discovery cohort (with larger sample sizes) and the replication cohort from UKBB and GERA. In the discovery cohort, GWAS SNPs were divided into five bins according to their p-values (I: (), II: [, ), III: [, ), IV: [, ), V: [, )). In the replication cohort, GWAS significant SNPs were identified with a relaxed threshold (p). In each bin, SNPs were broken down into prioritized and non-prioritized groups by the OWAS-joint results (). The p-values shown in the figure were derived from the binomial test.