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A simple method for assessing the strength of evidence for association at the level of the whole gene

INTRODUCTION: It is expected that different markers may show different patterns of association with different pathogenic variants within a given gene. It would be helpful to combine the evidence implicating association at the level of the whole gene rather than just for individual markers or haploty...

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Autores principales: Curtis, David, Vine, Anna E, Knight, Jo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3169937/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21918610
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author Curtis, David
Vine, Anna E
Knight, Jo
author_facet Curtis, David
Vine, Anna E
Knight, Jo
author_sort Curtis, David
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: It is expected that different markers may show different patterns of association with different pathogenic variants within a given gene. It would be helpful to combine the evidence implicating association at the level of the whole gene rather than just for individual markers or haplotypes. Doing this is complicated by the fact that different markers do not represent independent sources of information. METHOD: We propose combining the p values from all single locus and/or multilocus analyses of different markers according to the formula of Fisher, X = ∑(−2ln(p(i))), and then assessing the empirical significance of this statistic using permutation testing. We present an example application to 19 markers around the HTRA2 gene in a case-control study of Parkinson’s disease. RESULTS: Applying our approach shows that, although some individual tests produce low p values, overall association at the level of the gene is not supported. DISCUSSION: Approaches such as this should be more widely used in assimilating the overall evidence supporting involvement of a gene in a particular disease. Information can be combined from biallelic and multiallelic markers and from single markers along with multimarker analyses. Single genes can be tested or results from groups of genes involved in the same pathway could be combined in order to test biologically relevant hypotheses. The approach has been implemented in a computer program called COMBASSOC which is made available for downloading.
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spelling pubmed-31699372011-09-14 A simple method for assessing the strength of evidence for association at the level of the whole gene Curtis, David Vine, Anna E Knight, Jo Adv Appl Bioinforma Chem Original Research INTRODUCTION: It is expected that different markers may show different patterns of association with different pathogenic variants within a given gene. It would be helpful to combine the evidence implicating association at the level of the whole gene rather than just for individual markers or haplotypes. Doing this is complicated by the fact that different markers do not represent independent sources of information. METHOD: We propose combining the p values from all single locus and/or multilocus analyses of different markers according to the formula of Fisher, X = ∑(−2ln(p(i))), and then assessing the empirical significance of this statistic using permutation testing. We present an example application to 19 markers around the HTRA2 gene in a case-control study of Parkinson’s disease. RESULTS: Applying our approach shows that, although some individual tests produce low p values, overall association at the level of the gene is not supported. DISCUSSION: Approaches such as this should be more widely used in assimilating the overall evidence supporting involvement of a gene in a particular disease. Information can be combined from biallelic and multiallelic markers and from single markers along with multimarker analyses. Single genes can be tested or results from groups of genes involved in the same pathway could be combined in order to test biologically relevant hypotheses. The approach has been implemented in a computer program called COMBASSOC which is made available for downloading. Dove Medical Press 2008-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3169937/ /pubmed/21918610 Text en © 2008 Curtis et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Curtis, David
Vine, Anna E
Knight, Jo
A simple method for assessing the strength of evidence for association at the level of the whole gene
title A simple method for assessing the strength of evidence for association at the level of the whole gene
title_full A simple method for assessing the strength of evidence for association at the level of the whole gene
title_fullStr A simple method for assessing the strength of evidence for association at the level of the whole gene
title_full_unstemmed A simple method for assessing the strength of evidence for association at the level of the whole gene
title_short A simple method for assessing the strength of evidence for association at the level of the whole gene
title_sort simple method for assessing the strength of evidence for association at the level of the whole gene
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3169937/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21918610
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