Interpreting population- and family-based genome-wide association studies in the presence of confounding

by Carl Veller, Graham M. Coop A central aim of genome-wide association studies (GWASs) is to estimate direct genetic effects: the causal effects on an individual ’s phenotype of the alleles that they carry. However, estimates of direct effects can be subject to genetic and environmental confounding and can also absorb the “indirect” genetic effects of relatives’ genotypes. Recently, an important development in controlling for these confounds has been the use of within-family GWASs, which, because of the randomness of mendelian segregation within pedigrees, are often interpreted as producing unbiased estimates of direct effects. Here, we present a general theoretical analysis of the influence of confounding in standard population-based and withi n-family GWASs. We show that, contrary to common interpretation, family-based estimates of direct effects can be biased by genetic confounding. In humans, such biases will often be small per-locus, but can be compounded when effect-size estimates are used in polygenic scores (PGSs). We illustrate th e influence of genetic confounding on population- and family-based estimates of direct effects using models of assortative mating, population stratification, and stabilizing selection on GWAS traits. We further show how family-based estimates of indirect genetic effects, based on comparisons of pare ntally transmitted and untransmitted alleles, can suffer substantial genetic confounding. We conclude that, while family-based studie...
Source: PLoS Biology: Archived Table of Contents - Category: Biology Authors: Source Type: research