PLoS ONE (Jan 2010)

A general model for multilocus epistatic interactions in case-control studies.

  • Zhong Wang,
  • Tian Liu,
  • Zhenwu Lin,
  • John Hegarty,
  • Walter A Koltun,
  • Rongling Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0011384
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 8
p. e11384

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: Epistasis, i.e., the interaction of alleles at different loci, is thought to play a central role in the formation and progression of complex diseases. The complexity of disease expression should arise from a complex network of epistatic interactions involving multiple genes. METHODOLOGY: We develop a general model for testing high-order epistatic interactions for a complex disease in a case-control study. We incorporate the quantitative genetic theory of high-order epistasis into the setting of cases and controls sampled from a natural population. The new model allows the identification and testing of epistasis and its various genetic components. CONCLUSIONS: Simulation studies were used to examine the power and false positive rates of the model under different sampling strategies. The model was used to detect epistasis in a case-control study of inflammatory bowel disease, in which five SNPs at a candidate gene were typed, leading to the identification of a significant three-locus epistasis.