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    Am J Hum Genet. 2006 Oct;79(4):679-94. Epub 2006 Aug 31.

    A flexible Bayesian framework for modeling haplotype association with disease, allowing for dominance effects of the underlying causative variants.

    Source

    Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, Oxford, OX3 7BN, United Kingdom. amorris@well.ox.ac.uk

    Abstract

    Multilocus analysis of single-nucleotide-polymorphism (SNP) haplotypes may provide evidence of association with disease, even when the individual loci themselves do not. Haplotype-based methods are expected to outperform single-SNP analyses because (i) common genetic variation can be structured into haplotypes within blocks of strong linkage disequilibrium and (ii) the functional properties of a protein are determined by the linear sequence of amino acids corresponding to DNA variation on a haplotype. Here, I propose a flexible Bayesian framework for modeling haplotype association with disease in population-based studies of candidate genes or small candidate regions. I employ a Bayesian partition model to describe the correlation between marker-SNP haplotypes and causal variants at the underlying functional polymorphism(s). Under this model, haplotypes are clustered according to their similarity, in terms of marker-SNP allele matches, which is used as a proxy for recent shared ancestry. Haplotypes within a cluster are then assigned the same probability of carrying a causal variant at the functional polymorphism(s). In this way, I can account for the dominance effect of causal variants, here corresponding to any deviation from a multiplicative contribution to disease risk. The results of a detailed simulation study demonstrate that there is minimal cost associated with modeling these dominance effects, with substantial gains in power over haplotype-based methods that do not incorporate clustering and that assume a multiplicative model of disease risks.

    PMID:
    16960804
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC1592560
    Free PMC Article

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