BioData Mining (Feb 2021)

Performance of model-based multifactor dimensionality reduction methods for epistasis detection by controlling population structure

  • Fentaw Abegaz,
  • François Van Lishout,
  • Jestinah M. Mahachie John,
  • Kridsadakorn Chiachoompu,
  • Archana Bhardwaj,
  • Diane Duroux,
  • Elena S. Gusareva,
  • Zhi Wei,
  • Hakon Hakonarson,
  • Kristel Van Steen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13040-021-00247-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 20

Abstract

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Abstract Background In genome-wide association studies the extent and impact of confounding due to population structure have been well recognized. Inadequate handling of such confounding is likely to lead to spurious associations, hampering replication, and the identification of causal variants. Several strategies have been developed for protecting associations against confounding, the most popular one is based on Principal Component Analysis. In contrast, the extent and impact of confounding due to population structure in gene-gene interaction association epistasis studies are much less investigated and understood. In particular, the role of nonlinear genetic population substructure in epistasis detection is largely under-investigated, especially outside a regression framework. Methods To identify causal variants in synergy, to improve interpretability and replicability of epistasis results, we introduce three strategies based on a model-based multifactor dimensionality reduction approach for structured populations, namely MBMDR-PC, MBMDR-PG, and MBMDR-GC. Results Simulation results comparing the performance of various approaches show that in the presence of population structure MBMDR-PC and MBMDR-PG consistently better control type I error rate at the nominal level than MBMDR-GC. Moreover, our proposed three methods of population structure correction outperform MDR-SP in terms of statistical power. Conclusion We demonstrate through extensive simulation studies the effect of various degrees of genetic population structure and relatedness on epistasis detection and propose appropriate remedial measures based on linear and nonlinear sample genetic similarity.

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