From phenotype to genotype: A Bayesian solution

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Abstract

The study of biological systems commonly depends on inferring the state of a 'hidden' variable, such as an underlying genotype, from that of an 'observed' variable, such as an expressed phenotype. However, this cannot be achieved using traditional quantitative methods when more than one genetic mechanism exists for a single observable phenotype. Using a novel latent class Bayesian model, it is possible to infer the prevalence of different genetic elements in a population given a sample of phenotypes. As an exemplar, data comprising phenotypic resistance to six antimicrobials obtained from passive surveillance of Salmonella Typhimurium DT104 are analysed to infer the prevalence of individual resistance genes, as well as the prevalence of a genomic island known as SGI1 and its variants. Three competing models are fitted to the data and distinguished between using posterior predictive p-values to assess their ability to predict the observed number of unique phenotypes. The results suggest that several SGI1 variants circulate in a few fixed forms through the population from which our data were derived. The methods presented could be applied to other types of phenotypic data, and represent a useful and generic mechanism of inferring the genetic population structure of organisms. © 2010 The Royal Society.

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APA

Denwood, M. J., Mather, A. E., Haydon, D. T., Matthews, L., Mellor, D. J., & Reid, S. W. J. (2011). From phenotype to genotype: A Bayesian solution. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 278(1710), 1434–1440. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2010.1719

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