» Articles » PMID: 28103232

A Model of Compound Heterozygous, Loss-of-Function Alleles Is Broadly Consistent with Observations from Complex-Disease GWAS Datasets

Overview
Journal PLoS Genet
Specialty Genetics
Date 2017 Jan 20
PMID 28103232
Citations 15
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The genetic component of complex disease risk in humans remains largely unexplained. A corollary is that the allelic spectrum of genetic variants contributing to complex disease risk is unknown. Theoretical models that relate population genetic processes to the maintenance of genetic variation for quantitative traits may suggest profitable avenues for future experimental design. Here we use forward simulation to model a genomic region evolving under a balance between recurrent deleterious mutation and Gaussian stabilizing selection. We consider multiple genetic and demographic models, and several different methods for identifying genomic regions harboring variants associated with complex disease risk. We demonstrate that the model of gene action, relating genotype to phenotype, has a qualitative effect on several relevant aspects of the population genetic architecture of a complex trait. In particular, the genetic model impacts genetic variance component partitioning across the allele frequency spectrum and the power of statistical tests. Models with partial recessivity closely match the minor allele frequency distribution of significant hits from empirical genome-wide association studies without requiring homozygous effect sizes to be small. We highlight a particular gene-based model of incomplete recessivity that is appealing from first principles. Under that model, deleterious mutations in a genomic region partially fail to complement one another. This model of gene-based recessivity predicts the empirically observed inconsistency between twin and SNP based estimated of dominance heritability. Furthermore, this model predicts considerable levels of unexplained variance associated with intralocus epistasis. Our results suggest a need for improved statistical tools for region based genetic association and heritability estimation.

Citing Articles

FREQ-Seq2: a method for precise high-throughput combinatorial quantification of allele frequencies.

Zhao R, Lukacsovich T, Gaut R, Emerson J G3 (Bethesda). 2023; 13(10).

PMID: 37494033 PMC: 10542570. DOI: 10.1093/g3journal/jkad162.


Local fitness and epistatic effects lead to distinct patterns of linkage disequilibrium in protein-coding genes.

Ragsdale A Genetics. 2022; 221(4).

PMID: 35736370 PMC: 9339331. DOI: 10.1093/genetics/iyac097.


nPhase: an accurate and contiguous phasing method for polyploids.

Abou Saada O, Tsouris A, Eberlein C, Friedrich A, Schacherer J Genome Biol. 2021; 22(1):126.

PMID: 33926549 PMC: 8082856. DOI: 10.1186/s13059-021-02342-x.


A Survey of Compound Heterozygous Variants in Pediatric Cancers and Structural Birth Defects.

Miller D, Piccolo S Front Genet. 2021; 12:640242.

PMID: 33828584 PMC: 8019969. DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2021.640242.


Genetic-variant hotspots and hotspot clusters in the human genome facilitating adaptation while increasing instability.

Long X, Xue H Hum Genomics. 2021; 15(1):19.

PMID: 33741065 PMC: 7976700. DOI: 10.1186/s40246-021-00318-3.


References
1.
Gao F, Keinan A . High burden of private mutations due to explosive human population growth and purifying selection. BMC Genomics. 2014; 15 Suppl 4:S3. PMC: 4083409. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-15-S4-S3. View

2.
Lee S, Yang J, Chen G, Ripke S, Stahl E, Hultman C . Estimation of SNP heritability from dense genotype data. Am J Hum Genet. 2013; 93(6):1151-5. PMC: 3852919. DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2013.10.015. View

3.
Aris-Brosou S, Excoffier L . The impact of population expansion and mutation rate heterogeneity on DNA sequence polymorphism. Mol Biol Evol. 1996; 13(3):494-504. DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a025610. View

4.
Luciano M, Svinti V, Campbell A, Marioni R, Hayward C, Wright A . Exome sequencing to detect rare variants associated with general cognitive ability: a pilot study. Twin Res Hum Genet. 2015; 18(2):117-25. DOI: 10.1017/thg.2015.10. View

5.
Sham P, Purcell S . Equivalence between Haseman-Elston and variance-components linkage analyses for sib pairs. Am J Hum Genet. 2001; 68(6):1527-32. PMC: 1226141. DOI: 10.1086/320593. View