DocumentCode
1772944
Title
Dissecting the obesity disease landscape: Identifying gene-gene interactions that are highly associated with body mass index
Author
De, Rishika ; Verma, Shefali S. ; Holmes, Michael V. ; Asselbergs, Folkert W. ; Moore, Jason H. ; Keating, Brendan J. ; Ritchie, Marylyn D. ; Gilbert-Diamond, Diane
Author_Institution
Geisel Sch. of Med., Dept. of Genetics, Dartmouth Coll., Hanover, NH, USA
fYear
2014
fDate
24-27 Oct. 2014
Firstpage
124
Lastpage
131
Abstract
Despite heritability estimates of 40-70% for obesity, less than 2% of its variation is explained by Body Mass Index (BMI) associated loci that have been identified so far. Epistasis, or gene-gene interactions are a plausible source to explain portions of the missing heritability of BMI. Using genotypic data from 18,686 individuals across five study cohorts - ARIC, CARDIA, FHS, CHS, MESA - we filtered SNPs (Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms) using two parallel approaches. SNPs were filtered either on the strength of their main effects of association with BMI, or on the number of knowledge sources supporting a specific SNP-SNP interaction in the context of obesity. Filtered SNPs were specifically analyzed for interactions that are highly associated with BMI using QMDR (Quantitative Multifactor Dimensionality Reduction). QMDR is a nonparametric, genetic model-free method that detects nonlinear interactions in the context of a quantitative trait. We identified seven novel, epistatic models with a Bonferroni corrected p-value of association <; 0.06. Prior experimental evidence helps explain the plausible biological interactions highlighted within our results and their relationship with obesity. We identified interactions between genes involved in mitochondrial dysfunction (POLG2), cholesterol metabolism (SOAT2), lipid metabolism (CYP11B2), cell adhesion (EZR), cell proliferation (MAP2K5), and insulin resistance (IGF1R). This study highlights a novel approach for discovering gene-gene interactions by combining methods such as QMDR with traditional statistics.
Keywords
adhesion; association; biochemistry; biomechanics; cellular biophysics; diseases; genetics; lipid bilayers; polymorphism; ARIC; Bonferroni corrected p-value; CARDIA; CITS; CYPllB2; EZR; FITS; IGFIR; MAP2K5; MESA; POLG2; QMDR; SOAT2; association; body mass index; cell adhesion; cell proliferation; cholesterol metabolism; epistatic models; gene-gene interactions; genetic heritability; genotypic data; insulin resistance; lipid metabolism; mitochondrial dysfunction; nonlinear interaction detection; nonparametric genetic model-free method; obesity disease; plausible biological interactions; quantitative multifactor dimensionality reduction; single nucleotide polymorphism; specific SNP-SNP interaction; statistical analyses; Adhesives; Analytical models; Bioinformatics; Biological system modeling; Context; Genomics; Obesity; GWAS; epistasis; gene-gene interaction; multifactor dimensionality reduction; obesity;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Systems Biology (ISB), 2014 8th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Qingdao
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISB.2014.6990744
Filename
6990744
Link To Document