Gene analysis for longitudinal family data using random-effects models

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Abstract

We have extended our recently developed 2-step approach for gene-based analysis to the family design and to the analysis of rare variants. The goal of this approach is to study the joint effect of multiple single-nucleotide polymorphisms that belong to a gene. First, the information in a gene is summarized by 2 variables, namely the empirical Bayes estimate capturing common variation and the number of rare variants. By using random effects for the common variants, our approach acknowledges the within-gene correlations. In the second step, the 2 summaries were included as covariates in linear mixed models. To test the null hypothesis of no association, a multivariate Wald test was applied. We analyzed the simulated data sets to assess the performance of the method. Then we applied the method to the real data set and identified a significant association between FRMD4B and diastolic blood pressure (p-value = 8.3 × 10-12).

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Houwing-Duistermaat, J. J., Helmer, Q., Balliu, B., Van Den Akker, E., Tsonaka, R., & Uh, H. W. (2014). Gene analysis for longitudinal family data using random-effects models. In BMC Proceedings (Vol. 8). BioMed Central Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1186/1753-6561-8-S1-S88

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