Frontiers in Genetics (Oct 2021)

A Multi-Marker Test for Analyzing Paired Genetic Data in Transplantation

  • Victoria L. Arthur,
  • Zhengbang Li,
  • Zhengbang Li,
  • Rui Cao,
  • William S. Oetting,
  • Ajay K. Israni,
  • Ajay K. Israni,
  • Ajay K. Israni,
  • Pamala A. Jacobson,
  • Marylyn D. Ritchie,
  • Weihua Guan,
  • Jinbo Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2021.745773
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Emerging evidence suggests that donor/recipient matching in non-HLA (human leukocyte antigen) regions of the genome may impact transplant outcomes and recognizing these matching effects may increase the power of transplant genetics studies. Most available matching scores account for either single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) matching only or sum these SNP matching scores across multiple gene-coding regions, which makes it challenging to interpret the association findings. We propose a multi-marker Joint Score Test (JST) to jointly test for association between recipient genotype SNP effects and a gene-based matching score with transplant outcomes. This method utilizes Eigen decomposition as a dimension reduction technique to potentially increase statistical power by decreasing the degrees of freedom for the test. In addition, JST allows for the matching effect and the recipient genotype effect to follow different biological mechanisms, which is not the case for other multi-marker methods. Extensive simulation studies show that JST is competitive when compared with existing methods, such as the sequence kernel association test (SKAT), especially under scenarios where associated SNPs are in low linkage disequilibrium with non-associated SNPs or in gene regions containing a large number of SNPs. Applying the method to paired donor/recipient genetic data from kidney transplant studies yields various gene regions that are potentially associated with incidence of acute rejection after transplant.

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