Author:
Gayán Javier,González-Pérez Antonio,Bermudo Fernando,Sáez María Eugenia,Royo Jose Luis,Quintas Antonio,Galan Jose Jorge,Morón Francisco Jesús,Ramirez-Lorca Reposo,Real Luis Miguel,Ruiz Agustín
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The difficulty in elucidating the genetic basis of complex diseases roots in the many factors that can affect the development of a disease. Some of these genetic effects may interact in complex ways, proving undetectable by current single-locus methodology.
Results
We have developed an analysis tool called Hypothesis Free Clinical Cloning (HFCC) to search for genome-wide epistasis in a case-control design. HFCC combines a relatively fast computing algorithm for genome-wide epistasis detection, with the flexibility to test a variety of different epistatic models in multi-locus combinations. HFCC has good power to detect multi-locus interactions simulated under a variety of genetic models and noise conditions. Most importantly, HFCC can accomplish exhaustive genome-wide epistasis search with large datasets as demonstrated with a 400,000 SNP set typed on a cohort of Parkinson's disease patients and controls.
Conclusion
With the current availability of genetic studies with large numbers of individuals and genetic markers, HFCC can have a great impact in the identification of epistatic effects that escape the standard single-locus association analyses.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
58 articles.
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