Martin E R, Schmidt M A
Center for Genetic Epidemiology and Statistical Genetics, Miami Institute for Human Genomics, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL 33136, USA.
Hum Hered. 2008;66(2):127-35. doi: 10.1159/000119112. Epub 2008 Mar 31.
The transmission/disequilibrium test (TDT) [Spielman et al.: Am J Hum Genet 1993;52:506-516] has been postulated as the future of gene mapping for complex diseases, provided one is able to genotype a dense enough map of markers across the genome. Risch and Merikangas [Science 1996;273:1516-1517] suggested a million-marker screen in affected sibpair (ASP) families, demonstrating that the TDT is a more powerful test of linkage than traditional linkage tests based on allele-sharing when there is also association between marker and disease alleles. While the future of genotyping has arrived, successes in family-based association studies have been modest. This is often attributed to excessive false positives in candidate gene studies. This problem is only exacerbated by the increasing numbers of whole genome association (WGA) screens. When applied in ASPs, the TDT statistic, which assumes transmissions to siblings are independent, is not expected to have a constant variance in the presence of variable linkage. This results in generally more extreme statistics, hence will further aggravate the problem of having a large number of positive results to sort through. So an important question is how many positive TDT results will show up on a chromosome containing a disease gene due only to linkage, and will they obfuscate the true disease gene location. To answer this question we combined theory and computer simulations. These studies show that in ASPs the normal version of the TDT statistic has a mean of 0 and a variance of 1 in unlinked regions, but has a variance larger than 1 in linked regions. In contrast, the pedigree disequilibrium test (PDT) statistic adjusts for correlation between siblings due to linkage and maintains a constant variance of 1 at unassociated markers irrespective of linkage. The TDT statistic is generally larger than the PDT statistic across linked regions. This is true for unassociated as well as associated markers. To compare the two tests we ranked both statistics at the disease locus, or an associated marker, among statistics at all other markers. The TDT did better job than PDT placing the score of the associated marker near the top. Though, strictly speaking, the TDT in ASPs should be interpreted as a test of linkage and not a test of association, there is a good chance that if a marker stands out, the marker is associated as well as linked. In conclusion, our results suggest that TDT is an effective screening tool for WGA studies, especially in multiplex families.
传递/不平衡检验(TDT)[斯皮尔曼等人:《美国人类遗传学杂志》1993年;52卷:506 - 516页]被认为是复杂疾病基因定位的未来方法,前提是能够对全基因组范围内足够密集的标记进行基因分型。里施和梅里康加斯[《科学》1996年;273卷:1516 - 1517页]建议在患病同胞对(ASP)家庭中进行百万标记筛查,表明当标记与疾病等位基因之间也存在关联时,TDT比基于等位基因共享的传统连锁检验是一种更强大的连锁检验。虽然基因分型的时代已经到来,但基于家系的关联研究的成功却很有限。这通常归因于候选基因研究中过多的假阳性。随着全基因组关联(WGA)筛查数量的增加,这个问题只会更加严重。当应用于ASP时,假设向兄弟姐妹的传递是独立的TDT统计量,在存在可变连锁的情况下预计不会有恒定的方差。这导致统计量通常更极端,因此会进一步加剧需要筛选大量阳性结果的问题。所以一个重要的问题是,在仅由于连锁而包含疾病基因的染色体上会出现多少个阳性TDT结果,以及它们是否会混淆真正的疾病基因位置。为了回答这个问题,我们结合了理论和计算机模拟。这些研究表明,在ASP中,TDT统计量的正常版本在非连锁区域的均值为0,方差为1,但在连锁区域方差大于1。相比之下,家系不平衡检验(PDT)统计量针对由于连锁导致的兄弟姐妹之间的相关性进行了调整,并且在未关联的标记处无论连锁情况如何都保持恒定的方差1。在整个连锁区域,TDT统计量通常大于PDT统计量。对于未关联以及关联的标记都是如此。为了比较这两种检验,我们在所有其他标记的统计量中,对疾病位点或关联标记处的两种统计量进行排名。在将关联标记的分数置于顶部附近方面,TDT比PDT做得更好。虽然严格来说,ASP中的TDT应被解释为连锁检验而非关联检验,但如果一个标记很突出,那么该标记很有可能既与疾病相关又与疾病连锁。总之,我们的结果表明TDT是WGA研究的一种有效筛查工具,尤其是在复杂家系中。