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      Genome-wide strategies for detecting multiple loci that influence complex diseases.

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          Abstract

          After nearly 10 years of intense academic and commercial research effort, large genome-wide association studies for common complex diseases are now imminent. Although these conditions involve a complex relationship between genotype and phenotype, including interactions between unlinked loci, the prevailing strategies for analysis of such studies focus on the locus-by-locus paradigm. Here we consider analytical methods that explicitly look for statistical interactions between loci. We show first that they are computationally feasible, even for studies of hundreds of thousands of loci, and second that even with a conservative correction for multiple testing, they can be more powerful than traditional analyses under a range of models for interlocus interactions. We also show that plausible variations across populations in allele frequencies among interacting loci can markedly affect the power to detect their marginal effects, which may account in part for the well-known difficulties in replicating association results. These results suggest that searching for interactions among genetic loci can be fruitfully incorporated into analysis strategies for genome-wide association studies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nat Genet
          Nature genetics
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          1061-4036
          1061-4036
          Apr 2005
          : 37
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Statistics, University of Oxford, 1 South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3TG, UK.
          Article
          ng1537
          10.1038/ng1537
          15793588
          b0dc0168-9809-4b5c-8d61-867e652e49f0
          History

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