Originally published as Genetics Published Articles Ahead of Print on April 3, 2007.
Genetics, Vol. 176, 1151-1167, June 2007, Copyright © 2007
doi:10.1534/genetics.106.067348
A Unified Model for Functional and Statistical Epistasis and Its Application in Quantitative Trait Loci Analysis
José M. Álvarez-Castro1 and
Örjan Carlborg
Linnaeus Centre for Bioinformatics, Uppsala University, SE-75124 Uppsala, Sweden
1 Corresponding author: Linnaeus Centre for Bioinformatics, Uppsala University, Bio Medical Centre Box 598, SE-75124 Uppsala, Sweden.
E-mail: jose.alvarez-castro{at}lcb.uu.se
Interaction between genes, or epistasis, is found to be common and it is a key concept for understanding adaptation and evolution of natural populations, response to selection in breeding programs, and determination of complex disease. Currently, two independent classes of models are used to study epistasis. Statistical models focus on maintaining desired statistical properties for detection and estimation of genetic effects and for the decomposition of genetic variance using average effects of allele substitutions in populations as parameters. Functional models focus on the evolutionary consequences of the attributes of the genotypephenotype map using natural effects of allele substitutions as parameters. Here we provide a new, general and unified model framework: the natural and orthogonal interactions (NOIA) model. NOIA implements tools for transforming genetic effects measured in one population to the ones of other populations (e.g., between two experimental designs for QTL) and parameters of statistical and functional epistasis into each other (thus enabling us to obtain functional estimates of QTL), as demonstrated numerically. We develop graphical interpretations of functional and statistical models as regressions of the genotypic values on the gene content, which illustrates the difference between the modelsthe constraint on the slope of the functional regressionand when the models are equivalent. Furthermore, we use our theoretical foundations to conceptually clarify functional and statistical epistasis, discuss the advantages of NOIA over previous theory, and stress the importance of linking functional and statistical models.
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Genetics,
April 1, 2008;
178(4):
2265 - 2274.
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Copyright © 2007 by the Genetics Society of America.