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A Statistical Approach for Rare-Variant Association Testing in Affected Sibships
Authors:Michael?P Epstein  Richard Duncan  Erin?B Ware  Min?A Jhun  Lawrence?F Bielak  Wei Zhao  Jennifer?A Smith  Patricia?A Peyser  Sharon?LR Kardia  Glen?A Satten
Institution:1Department of Human Genetics, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA;2Department of Epidemiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48103, USA;3Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30341, USA
Abstract:Sequencing and exome-chip technologies have motivated development of novel statistical tests to identify rare genetic variation that influences complex diseases. Although many rare-variant association tests exist for case-control or cross-sectional studies, far fewer methods exist for testing association in families. This is unfortunate, because cosegregation of rare variation and disease status in families can amplify association signals for rare variants. Many researchers have begun sequencing (or genotyping via exome chips) familial samples that were either recently collected or previously collected for linkage studies. Because many linkage studies of complex diseases sampled affected sibships, we propose a strategy for association testing of rare variants for use in this study design. The logic behind our approach is that rare susceptibility variants should be found more often on regions shared identical by descent by affected sibling pairs than on regions not shared identical by descent. We propose both burden and variance-component tests of rare variation that are applicable to affected sibships of arbitrary size and that do not require genotype information from unaffected siblings or independent controls. Our approaches are robust to population stratification and produce analytic p values, thereby enabling our approach to scale easily to genome-wide studies of rare variation. We illustrate our methods by using simulated data and exome chip data from sibships ascertained for hypertension collected as part of the Genetic Epidemiology Network of Arteriopathy (GENOA) study.
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