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Evaluation and application of summary statistic imputation to discover new height-associated loci

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  • Sina Rüeger
  • Aaron McDaid
  • Zoltán Kutalik

Abstract

As most of the heritability of complex traits is attributed to common and low frequency genetic variants, imputing them by combining genotyping chips and large sequenced reference panels is the most cost-effective approach to discover the genetic basis of these traits. Association summary statistics from genome-wide meta-analyses are available for hundreds of traits. Updating these to ever-increasing reference panels is very cumbersome as it requires reimputation of the genetic data, rerunning the association scan, and meta-analysing the results. A much more efficient method is to directly impute the summary statistics, termed as summary statistics imputation, which we improved to accommodate variable sample size across SNVs. Its performance relative to genotype imputation and practical utility has not yet been fully investigated. To this end, we compared the two approaches on real (genotyped and imputed) data from 120K samples from the UK Biobank and show that, genotype imputation boasts a 3- to 5-fold lower root-mean-square error, and better distinguishes true associations from null ones: We observed the largest differences in power for variants with low minor allele frequency and low imputation quality. For fixed false positive rates of 0.001, 0.01, 0.05, using summary statistics imputation yielded a decrease in statistical power by 9, 43 and 35%, respectively. To test its capacity to discover novel associations, we applied summary statistics imputation to the GIANT height meta-analysis summary statistics covering HapMap variants, and identified 34 novel loci, 19 of which replicated using data in the UK Biobank. Additionally, we successfully replicated 55 out of the 111 variants published in an exome chip study. Our study demonstrates that summary statistics imputation is a very efficient and cost-effective way to identify and fine-map trait-associated loci. Moreover, the ability to impute summary statistics is important for follow-up analyses, such as Mendelian randomisation or LD-score regression.Author summary: Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) quantify the effect of genetic variants and traits, such as height. Such estimates are called association summary statistics and are typically publicly shared through publication. Typically, GWASs are carried out by genotyping ∼ 500′000 SNVs for each individual which are then combined with sequenced reference panels to infer untyped SNVs in each’ individuals genome. This process of genotype imputation is resource intensive and can therefore be a limitation when combining many GWASs. An alternative approach is to bypass the use of individual data and directly impute summary statistics. In our work we compare the performance of summary statistics imputation to genotype imputation. We observe that genotype imputation shows a 3- to 5-fold lower RMSE compared to summary statistics imputation, as well as a better capability to distinguish true associations from null results. Furthermore, we demonstrate the potential of summary statistics imputation by presenting 34 novel height-associated loci, 19 of which were confirmed in UK Biobank. Our study demonstrates that given current reference panels, summary statistics imputation is a very efficient and cost-effective way to identify common or low-frequency trait-associated loci.

Suggested Citation

  • Sina Rüeger & Aaron McDaid & Zoltán Kutalik, 2018. "Evaluation and application of summary statistic imputation to discover new height-associated loci," PLOS Genetics, Public Library of Science, vol. 14(5), pages 1-32, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pgen00:1007371
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1007371
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