TreeQA: quantitative genome wide association mapping using local perfect phylogeny trees. Conference Paper uri icon

abstract

  • The goal of genome wide association (GWA) mapping in modern genetics is to identify genes or narrow regions in the genome that contribute to genetically complex phenotypes such as morphology or disease. Among the existing methods, tree-based association mapping methods show obvious advantages over single marker-based and haplotype-based methods because they incorporate information about the evolutionary history of the genome into the analysis. However, existing tree-based methods are designed primarily for binary phenotypes derived from case/control studies or fail to scale genome-wide. In this paper, we introduce TreeQA, a quantitative GWA mapping algorithm. TreeQA utilizes local perfect phylogenies constructed in genomic regions exhibiting no evidence of historical recombination. By efficient algorithm design and implementation, TreeQA can efficiently conduct quantitative genom-wide association analysis and is more effective than the previous methods. We conducted extensive experiments on both simulated datasets and mouse inbred lines to demonstrate the efficiency and effectiveness of TreeQA.

published proceedings

  • Pac Symp Biocomput

author list (cited authors)

  • Pan, F., McMillan, L., Pardo-Manuel De Villena, F., Threadgill, D., & Wang, W.

citation count

  • 12

complete list of authors

  • Pan, Feng||McMillan, Leonard||Pardo-Manuel De Villena, Fernando||Threadgill, David||Wang, Wei

publication date

  • December 2009