Introduction to Genetic Association Studies

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Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Genetic Association Studies Peter Castaldi January 28, 2013

Objectives Define genetic association studies Historical perspective on genetic association and the development of GWAS Overview of Essential Components of a GWAS Analysis

Definitions Gene – functional unit of DNA that codes for a protein Genome – the entirety of an organism’s genetic material Genetics – study of heredity Genomics - the study of organism’s entire genome. Genetic association – genotype  phenotype

Fundamentals of Genetic Association Genetic association attempts to discern how genotype affects phenotype in populations Principal elements of genetic association Measure genetic variation Measure phenotypic variation Quantify the association between the two in multiple organisms, cells, etc. (Statistics) AA AB BB Affected Unaffected

The Strength of the Link Between Genotype and Phenotype is Variable Phenotypic variation = genetics + environment Heritability = the extent to which a trait is predictably passed from generation to generation Some Traits and Diseases are ~100% genetic Down’s syndrome Huntington’s Disease Hair color Other traits are co-determined by genetics AND environment (and randomness?) heart disease height personality?

Mendelian Genetics Focuses on Completely Heritable Phenotypes focused on traits with ~100% heritability Phenotype = genotype Used patterns of phenotypic inheritance to infer fundamental rules of “gene” transfer across generations Much of the fundamental understanding of how genes work arose from phenotype- level observations http://homeschoolersresources.blogspot.com/2010/04/gregor-mendels-punnet-squares.html

Linking “Genes” to Chromosomes 1915 – The Mechanisms of Mendelian Heritability “Genes” or units of heredity are located on chromosomes. Development of genetic maps (first maps based on recombination rates between linked genes) linking phenotypes to chromsomes was spurred by the identification of sex-linked traits by Morgan http://www.bio.georgiasouthern.edu/bio-home/harvey/lect/lectures.html

Identifying Genetic/Molecular Diseases Linus Pauling – 1949, identifies distinct hemoglobin phenotype in individuals with sickle cell disease. Genes  Protein Phenotype Precursor to central dogma DNA  RNA  Protein Pauling et al. Science 1949

Tools of Mendelian Genetics Generational Studies family-based studies controlled crosses mutational screens Phenotypic Observation and Quantification Genetic Maps for Gene Localization Genes close to each other on Chromsomes tended not to be randomly assorted during mating Rough scale genetic maps based purely on observed meioses in generational studies

Selected Landmarks in the Genetics of Human Disease, Mendelian Genetics to Common, Complex Genetics 2005 – First GWAS Published Linking Complement Factor H with AMD 1953 – Watson and Crick, Structure of DNA 1989 - CFTR Gene Mapped Via Positional Cloning 1960  1990 1949 – Linus Pauling, “Sickle Cell Anemia, A Molecular Disease” Mendelian Disease Genetics Candidate Gene Era GWAS Era 1990 - Human Genome Project Begins 2001 – First Draft of Human Genome Sequence Published

From Simple Mendelian Disorders to Complex Genetic Diseases Rare, “genetic” syndromes Marfan’s disease, cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia Single Gene Disorders, high penetrance Family based linkage studies, moderate sample size Complex Genetic Disorders Common diseases (diabetes, CAD, arthritis, COPD, cancer) Multigenic and multifactorial etiology Population based association studies, large sample sizes

Feasibility of identifying genetic variants by risk allele frequency and strength of genetic effect (odds ratio). TA Manolio et al. Nature 461, 747-753 (2009) doi:10.1038/nature08494

Tools of Common, Complex Disease Genetics in Humans Population-based studies (not family-based) thousands of human subjects Detailed, annotated genome maps Human genome project, ENCODE Encyclopedia of human genetic variation HapMap, 1000 Genomes Project High-throughout genotyping platforms

From Genes to GWAS – A Technology Driven Research Enterprise Hundreds of thousands of variants, Large Sample Size Single Variants, Small Sample Size RFLP Sanger Sequencing Days to weeks to identify a single genetic variant in a small number of samples Chip based genotyping technologies  >1 million genotypes on a single sample, single assay

What is a GWAS? Genome-Wide Association Study – study interrogating the relationship between genome-wide genetic variation and a phenotype. Characteristics Large volume of data Much of the data is ‘negative’ Unique information in genome-wide data Population structure Evolutionary selection

Key Elements of GWAS (What We’ll Learn This Week) case-control study design potential confounders to analysis (population stratification, ascertainment) genome-wide genotyping data management, special programs and computing requirements quality control statistical association testing multiple comparisons

Case-Control Design, Ascertainment

Confounding Population Stratification (subtle ancestral differences between case and control groups Traditional confounders (gender, environmental exposures) Phenotype misclassification (phenocopies, latent cases)

Association Testing

Visualization of Results Manhattan Plots genome-wide p-values Locus Plots gene-level visualization QQ Plots assess bias/significance LD Plots visualize local patterns of linkage disequilibrium

Linkage Disequilibrium (LD) Fundamental role of LD in chip design How to Use HapMap to understand LD

Published GWA Reports, 2005 – 6/2012 1350 Total Number of Publications Calendar Quarter Through 6/30/12 postings

GWAS Has Identified Many Novel, Robust Genetic Associations with Common Diseases Published Genome-Wide Associations through 07/2012 Published GWA at p≤5X10-8 for 18 trait categories NHGRI GWA Catalog www.genome.gov/GWAStudies www.ebi.ac.uk/fgpt/gwas/

The Candidate Gene Era was Characterized by Poorly Reproducible Results Ioannidis et al. Nat Gen. 2001

GWAS is a powerful tool successful study design for identifying robust genetic association with common disease depends on a great deal of genomic infrastructure HGP, HapMap, genotyping technology GWAS only identifies regions of association causative alleles need to be identified how loci interact to influence phenotype is poorly understood the majority of genetic variance for most common, complex diseases remains unexplained.