Mangnier L, Ruczinski I, Ricard J, Moreau C, Girard S, Maziade M, Bureau A. RetroFun-RVS: A Retrospective Family-Based Framework for Rare Variant Analysis Incorporating Functional Annotations.
Genet Epidemiol 2025;
49:e70001. [PMID:
39876583 PMCID:
PMC11775437 DOI:
10.1002/gepi.70001]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/03/2024] [Revised: 10/16/2024] [Accepted: 01/03/2025] [Indexed: 01/30/2025]
Abstract
A large proportion of genetic variations involved in complex diseases are rare and located within noncoding regions, making the interpretation of underlying biological mechanisms a daunting task. Although technical and methodological progress has been made to annotate the genome, current disease-rare-variant association tests incorporating such annotations suffer from two major limitations. First, they are generally restricted to case-control designs of unrelated individuals, which often require tens or hundreds of thousands of individuals to achieve sufficient power. Second, they were not evaluated with region-based annotations needed to interpret the causal regulatory mechanisms. In this work, we propose RetroFun-RVS, a new retrospective family-based score test, incorporating functional annotations. A critical feature of the proposed method is to aggregate genotypes to compare against rare variant-sharing expectations among affected family members. Through extensive simulations, we have demonstrated that RetroFun-RVS integrating networks based on 3D genome contacts as functional annotations reach greater power over the region-wide test, other strategies to include subregions and competing methods. Also, the proposed framework shows robustness to non-informative annotations, maintaining its power when causal variants are spread across regions. Asymptotic p-values are susceptible to Type I error inflation when the number of families with rare variants is small, and a bootstrap procedure is recommended in these instances. Application of RetroFun-RVS is illustrated on whole genome sequence in the Eastern Quebec Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder Kindred Study with networks constructed from 3D contacts and epigenetic data on neurons. In summary, the integration of functional annotations corresponding to regions or networks with transcriptional impacts in rare variant tests appears promising to highlight regulatory mechanisms involved in complex diseases.
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