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Rare Variants Create Synthetic Genome-Wide Associations

Contributed by:Administrator
Originally posted:27th January 2010: 12:40 pm
Last updated:27th January 2010: 12:42 pm
Short URL:http://gen2phen.org/node/12113
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DOI: 
10.1371/journal.pbio.1000294
URL: 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000294

A large number of different common variants has been associated with very modest increases of risk for various common diseases. A simulation study shows that rare variants with much greater impacts on disease risk may be responsible for some of these associations.

Abstract:

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have now identified at least 2,000 common variants that appear associated with common diseases or related traits (http://www.genome.gov/gwastudies), hundreds of which have been convincingly replicated. It is generally thought that the associated markers reflect the effect of a nearby common (minor allele frequency >0.05) causal site, which is associated with the marker, leading to extensive resequencing efforts to find causal sites. We propose as an alternative explanation that variants much less common than the associated one may create ¿synthetic associations¿ by occurring, stochastically, more often in association with one of the alleles at the common site versus the other allele. Although synthetic associations are an obvious theoretical possibility, they have never been systematically explored as a possible explanation for GWAS findings. Here, we use simple computer simulations to show the conditions under which such synthetic associations will arise and how they may be recognized. We show that they are not only possible, but inevitable, and that under simple but reasonable genetic models, they are likely to account for or contribute to many of the recently identified signals reported in genome-wide association studies. We also illustrate the behavior of synthetic associations in real datasets by showing that rare causal mutations responsible for both hearing loss and sickle cell anemia create genome-wide significant synthetic associations, in the latter case extending over a 2.5-Mb interval encompassing scores of 'blocks' of associated variants. In conclusion, uncommon or rare genetic variants can easily create synthetic associations that are credited to common variants, and this possibility requires careful consideration in the interpretation and follow up of GWAS signals.

Dickson SP, Wang K, Krantz I, Hakonarson H, Goldstein DB (2010) Rare Variants Create Synthetic Genome-Wide Associations. PLoS Biol 8(1): e1000294. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000294

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