نتایج جستجو برای: wide association study

تعداد نتایج: 4492963  

2017
Damian Brzyski Christine B. Peterson Piotr Sobczyk Emmanuel J. Candès Malgorzata Bogdan Chiara Sabatti

With the rise of both the number and the complexity of traits of interest, control of the false discovery rate (FDR) in genetic association studies has become an increasingly appealing and accepted target for multiple comparison adjustment. While a number of robust FDR-controlling strategies exist, the nature of this error rate is intimately tied to the precise way in which discoveries are coun...

2014
Alka Malhotra Sayuko Kobes Clifton Bogardus William C. Knowler Leslie J. Baier Robert L. Hanson

BACKGROUND Genotype imputation is commonly used in genetic association studies to test untyped variants using information on linkage disequilibrium (LD) with typed markers. Imputing genotypes requires a suitable reference population in which the LD pattern is known, most often one selected from HapMap. However, some populations, such as American Indians, are not represented in HapMap. In the pr...

2011
Jian Wang Sanjay Shete

In case-control genetic association studies, cases are subjects with the disease and controls are subjects without the disease. At the time of case-control data collection, information about secondary phenotypes is also collected. In addition to studies of primary diseases, there has been some interest in studying genetic variants associated with secondary phenotypes. In genetic association stu...

2013
Gabriel E. Hoffman

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0075707.].

2012
Keiichi Kodama Momoko Horikoshi Kyoko Toda Satoru Yamada Kazuo Hara Junichiro Irie Marina Sirota Alexander A. Morgan Rong Chen Hiroshi Ohtsu Shiro Maeda Takashi Kadowaki Atul J. Butte

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 2014
Janina S Ried So-Youn Shin Jan Krumsiek Thomas Illig Fabian J Theis Tim D Spector Jerzy Adamski H-Erich Wichmann Konstantin Strauch Nicole Soranzo Karsten Suhre Christian Gieger

Availability of standardized metabolite panels and genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism data endorse the comprehensive analysis of gene-metabolite association. Currently, many studies use genome-wide association analysis to investigate the genetic effects on single metabolites (mGWAS) separately. Such studies have identified several loci that are associated not only with one but with mult...

Journal: :Cell 2010
Lauren A. Zenewicz Clara Abraham Richard A. Flavell Judy H. Cho

The chronic autoimmune diseases include multiple complex genetic disorders. Recently, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified a large number of major loci, with many associations shared between various autoimmune diseases. These associations highlight key roles for lymphocyte activation and prioritize specific cytokine pathways and mechanisms of host-microbe recognition. Despite ...

2011
Reedik Mägi Ashish Kumar Andrew P Morris

Human genome resequencing technologies are becoming ever more affordable and provide a valuable source of data about rare genetic variants in the human genome. Such rare variation may play an important role in explaining the missing heritability of complex human traits. We implement an existing method for analyzing rare variants by testing for association with the mutational load across genes. ...

Journal: :Cancer research 2013
Li-E Wang Olga Y Gorlova Jun Ying Yawei Qiao Shih-Feng Weng Annette T Lee Peter K Gregersen Margaret R Spitz Christopher I Amos Qingyi Wei

Suboptimal cellular DNA repair capacity (DRC) has been shown to be associated with enhanced cancer risk, but genetic variants affecting the DRC phenotype have not been comprehensively investigated. In this study, with the available DRC phenotype data, we analyzed correlations between the DRC phenotype and genotypes detected by the Illumina 317K platform in 1,774 individuals of European ancestry...

2015
Jonathan S. Mitchell David C. Johnson Kevin Litchfield Peter Broderick Niels Weinhold Faith E. Davies Walter A. Gregory Graham H. Jackson Martin Kaiser Gareth J. Morgan Richard S. Houlston

A sizeable fraction of multiple myeloma (MM) is expected to be explained by heritable factors. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have successfully identified a number of common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) influencing MM risk. While these SNPs only explain a small proportion of the genetic risk it is unclear how much is left to be detected by other, yet to be identified, common S...

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