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qgg (version 1.1.1)

glma: Single marker association analysis using linear models or linear mixed models

Description

The function glma performs single marker association analysis between genotype markers and the phenotype either based on linear model analysis (LMA) or mixed linear model analysis (MLMA).

The basic MLMA approach involves 1) building a genetic relationship matrix (GRM) that models genome-wide sample structure, 2) estimating the contribution of the GRM to phenotypic variance using a random effects model (with or without additional fixed effects) and 3) computing association statistics that account for this component on phenotypic variance.

MLMA methods are the method of choice when conducting association mapping in the presence of sample structure, including geographic population structure, family relatedness and/or cryptic relatedness. MLMA methods prevent false positive associations and increase power. The general recommendation when using MLMA is to exclude candidate markers from the GRM. This can be efficiently implemented via a leave-one-chromosome-out analysis. Further, it is recommend that analyses of randomly ascertained quantitative traits should include all markers (except for the candidate marker and markers in LD with the candidate marker) in the GRM, except as follows. First, the set of markers included in the GRM can be pruned by LD to reduce running time (with association statistics still computed for all markers). Second, genome-wide significant markers of large effect should be conditioned out as fixed effects or as an additional random effect (if a large number of associated markers). Third, when population stratification is less of a concern, it may be useful using the top associated markers selected based on the global maximum from out-of sample predictive accuracy.

Usage

glma(
  y = NULL,
  X = NULL,
  W = NULL,
  Glist = NULL,
  chr = NULL,
  fit = NULL,
  verbose = FALSE,
  statistic = "mastor",
  ids = NULL,
  rsids = NULL,
  msize = 100,
  scale = TRUE
)

Value

Returns a dataframe (if number of traits = 1) else a list including

coef

single marker coefficients

se

standard error of coefficients

stat

single marker test statistic

p

p-value

Arguments

y

vector or matrix of phenotypes

X

design matrix for factors modeled as fixed effects

W

matrix of centered and scaled genotypes

Glist

list of information about genotype matrix stored on disk

chr

chromosome for which summary statistics are computed

fit

list of information about linear mixed model fit (output from greml)

verbose

is a logical; if TRUE it prints more details during optimization

statistic

single marker test statistic used (currently based on the "mastor" statistics).

ids

vector of individuals used in the analysis

rsids

vector of marker rsids used in the analysis

msize

number of genotype markers used for batch processing

scale

logical if TRUE the genotypes have been scaled to mean zero and variance one

Author

Peter Soerensen

References

Chen, W. M., & Abecasis, G. R. (2007). Family-based association tests for genomewide association scans. The American Journal of Human Genetics, 81(5), 913-926.

Loh, P. R., Tucker, G., Bulik-Sullivan, B. K., Vilhjalmsson, B. J., Finucane, H. K., Salem, R. M., ... & Patterson, N. (2015). Efficient Bayesian mixed-model analysis increases association power in large cohorts. Nature genetics, 47(3), 284-290.

Kang, H. M., Sul, J. H., Zaitlen, N. A., Kong, S. Y., Freimer, N. B., Sabatti, C., & Eskin, E. (2010). Variance component model to account for sample structure in genome-wide association studies. Nature genetics, 42(4), 348-354.

Lippert, C., Listgarten, J., Liu, Y., Kadie, C. M., Davidson, R. I., & Heckerman, D. (2011). FaST linear mixed models for genome-wide association studies. Nature methods, 8(10), 833-835.

Listgarten, J., Lippert, C., Kadie, C. M., Davidson, R. I., Eskin, E., & Heckerman, D. (2012). Improved linear mixed models for genome-wide association studies. Nature methods, 9(6), 525-526.

Listgarten, J., Lippert, C., & Heckerman, D. (2013). FaST-LMM-Select for addressing confounding from spatial structure and rare variants. Nature Genetics, 45(5), 470-471.

Lippert, C., Quon, G., Kang, E. Y., Kadie, C. M., Listgarten, J., & Heckerman, D. (2013). The benefits of selecting phenotype-specific variants for applications of mixed models in genomics. Scientific reports, 3.

Zhou, X., & Stephens, M. (2012). Genome-wide efficient mixed-model analysis for association studies. Nature genetics, 44(7), 821-824.

Svishcheva, G. R., Axenovich, T. I., Belonogova, N. M., van Duijn, C. M., & Aulchenko, Y. S. (2012). Rapid variance components-based method for whole-genome association analysis. Nature genetics, 44(10), 1166-1170.

Yang, J., Zaitlen, N. A., Goddard, M. E., Visscher, P. M., & Price, A. L. (2014). Advantages and pitfalls in the application of mixed-model association methods. Nature genetics, 46(2), 100-106.

Bulik-Sullivan, B. K., Loh, P. R., Finucane, H. K., Ripke, S., Yang, J., Patterson, N., ... & Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium. (2015). LD Score regression distinguishes confounding from polygenicity in genome-wide association studies. Nature genetics, 47(3), 291-295.

Examples

Run this code

# Simulate data
W <- matrix(rnorm(1000000), ncol = 1000)
	colnames(W) <- as.character(1:ncol(W))
	rownames(W) <- as.character(1:nrow(W))
y <- rowSums(W[, 1:10]) + rowSums(W[, 501:510]) + rnorm(nrow(W))

# Create model
data <- data.frame(y = y, mu = 1)
fm <- y ~ 0 + mu
X <- model.matrix(fm, data = data)

# Linear model analyses and single marker association test
stat <- glma(y=y,X=X,W = W)

head(stat)

# \donttest{
# Compute GRM
GRM <- grm(W = W)

# Estimate variance components using REML analysis
fit <- greml(y = y, X = X, GRM = list(GRM), verbose = TRUE)

# Single marker association test
stat <- glma(fit = fit, W = W)

head(stat)

# }


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