INTRODUCTION: It is expected that different markers may show different patterns of association with different pathogenic variants within a given gene. It would be helpful to combine the evidence implicating association at the level of the whole gene rather than just for individual markers or haplotypes. Doing this is complicated by the fact that different markers do not represent independent sources of information. METHOD: We propose combining the p values from all single locus and/or multilocus analyses of different markers according to the formula of Fisher, X = ∑(-2ln(p(i))), and then assessing the empirical significance of this statistic using permutation testing. We present an example application to 19 markers around the HTRA2 gene in ...
As the development of genotyping and next-generation sequencing technologies, multi-marker testing i...
Two case/control studies with different phenotypes, marker densities, and microarrays were examined ...
Linkage analysis may not provide the necessary resolution for identification of the genes underlying...
David Curtis1, Anna E Vine1, Jo Knight21Centre for Psychiatry, Queen Mary’s School of Medi...
The genetic basis of many common human diseases is expected to be highly heterogeneous, with multipl...
Association studies offer an exciting approach to finding underlying genetic variants of complex hum...
A topical question in genetic association studies is the optimal use of the information provided by ...
Historically, association tests were limited to single variants, so that the allele was considered t...
For complex diseases, we often sample and genotype affected sibships to map the disease of interest ...
This paper focuses on statistical methods that test for the effect of a single gene in a way that ac...
Poster Presentation: abstract 2815/WShifting from Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based associa...
There is increasing evidence showing that pleiotropy is a widespread phenomenon in complex diseases ...
Genome wide association studies have been usually analyzed in a univariate manner. The commonly used...
Additional information about risk genes or risk pathways for diseases can be extracted from genome-w...
Large exploratory studies, including candidate-gene–association testing, genomewide linkage-disequil...
As the development of genotyping and next-generation sequencing technologies, multi-marker testing i...
Two case/control studies with different phenotypes, marker densities, and microarrays were examined ...
Linkage analysis may not provide the necessary resolution for identification of the genes underlying...
David Curtis1, Anna E Vine1, Jo Knight21Centre for Psychiatry, Queen Mary’s School of Medi...
The genetic basis of many common human diseases is expected to be highly heterogeneous, with multipl...
Association studies offer an exciting approach to finding underlying genetic variants of complex hum...
A topical question in genetic association studies is the optimal use of the information provided by ...
Historically, association tests were limited to single variants, so that the allele was considered t...
For complex diseases, we often sample and genotype affected sibships to map the disease of interest ...
This paper focuses on statistical methods that test for the effect of a single gene in a way that ac...
Poster Presentation: abstract 2815/WShifting from Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based associa...
There is increasing evidence showing that pleiotropy is a widespread phenomenon in complex diseases ...
Genome wide association studies have been usually analyzed in a univariate manner. The commonly used...
Additional information about risk genes or risk pathways for diseases can be extracted from genome-w...
Large exploratory studies, including candidate-gene–association testing, genomewide linkage-disequil...
As the development of genotyping and next-generation sequencing technologies, multi-marker testing i...
Two case/control studies with different phenotypes, marker densities, and microarrays were examined ...
Linkage analysis may not provide the necessary resolution for identification of the genes underlying...