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GWAS Study

Polygenic approaches to detect gene-environment interactions when external information is unavailable.

Lin WY, Huang CC, Liu YL et al.

30219835 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
16543 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

LW
Lin WY
HC
Huang CC
LY
Liu YL
TS
Tsai SJ
KP
Kuo PH
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The exploration of 'gene-environment interactions' (G × E) is important for disease prediction and prevention. The scientific community usually uses external information to construct a genetic risk score (GRS), and then tests the interaction between this GRS and an environmental factor (E). However, external genome-wide association studies (GWAS) are not always available, especially for non-Caucasian ethnicity. Although GRS is an analysis tool to detect G × E in GWAS, its performance remains unclear when there is no external information. Our 'adaptive combination of Bayes factors method' (ADABF) can aggregate G × E signals and test the significance of G × E by a polygenic test. We here explore a powerful polygenic approach for G × E when external information is unavailable, by comparing our ADABF with the GRS based on marginal effects of SNPs (GRS-M) and GRS based on SNP × E interactions (GRS-I). ADABF is the most powerful method in the absence of SNP main effects, whereas GRS-M is generally the best test when single-nucleotide polymorphisms main effects exist. GRS-I is the least powerful test due to its data-splitting strategy. Furthermore, we apply these methods to Taiwan Biobank data. ADABF and GRS-M identified gene × alcohol and gene × smoking interactions on blood pressure (BP). BP-increasing alleles elevate more BP in drinkers (smokers) than in nondrinkers (nonsmokers). This work provides guidance to choose a polygenic approach to detect G × E when external information is unavailable.

1,764 East Asian ancestry alcohol-drinking individuals, 14,779 East Asian ancestry non-alcohol-drinking individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

16543
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
East Asian
Ancestry
Taiwan
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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