TY - JOUR
T1 - HLA and genomewide allele sharing in dizygotic twins
AU - Montgomery, Grant W.
AU - Zhu, Gu
AU - Hottenga, Jouke Jan
AU - Duffy, David L.
AU - Heath, Andrew C.
AU - Boomsma, Dorret I.
AU - Martin, Nicholas G.
AU - Visscher, Peter M.
N1 - Funding Information:
We acknowledge the help and support provided by many individuals at the Queensland Institute of Medical Research in Brisbane, including Dixie Statham and Alison MacKenzie, for project coordination; Anjali Henders and Megan Campbell, for managing sample processing and preparation; and David Smyth, Harry Beeby, Olivia Zheng, and Scott Gordon, for data management and their work in the integration of the genome scans in Brisbane. At the Department of Biological Psychology in Amsterdam, we acknowledge Mireille van den Berg, Nina Kupper, and Jacqueline Vink, for DNA collection; Gonneke Willemsen, Leo Beem, and Danielle Posthuma, for data management and integration of the genome scans; and Marianne Beekman, Nico Lakenberg, and Eka Suchiman, at the University Medical Centre in Leiden, for genotyping, sample processing, and preparation. We are grateful for the participation of the twins and their families in the various studies. For genome scans of twins and siblings, we acknowledge and thank the Mammalian Genotyping Service, Marshfield, WI (Director: Dr. James Weber), for genotyping under a grant to Dr. Daniel T. O’Connor (University of California–San Diego); the Center for Inherited Disease Research (CIDR), which is fully funded through a U.S. federal contract from the National Institutes of Health to The Johns Hopkins University (contract N01-HG-65403); Dr. Eline Slagboom, for the Leiden genome scan; Dr. Peter Reed, for the Gemini genome scan; and Dr. Jeff Hall, for the Sequana genome scan. This research was supported in part by (U.S.) National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism grants AA007535, AA013320, AA013326, AA014041, AA07728, AA10249, and AA11998; (U.S.) National Institute of Child Health & Human Development grant HD042157, and (Australian) National Health and Medical Research Council grants 241916, 339436, 389892, 941177, 941944, 951023, 950998, 981339, and 941944.
PY - 2006/12
Y1 - 2006/12
N2 - Gametic selection during fertilization or the effects of specific genotypes on the viability of embryos may cause a skewed transmission of chromosomes to surviving offspring. A recent analysis of transmission distortion in humans reported significant excess sharing among full siblings. Dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs are a special case of the simultaneous survival of two genotypes, and there have been reports of DZ pairs with excess allele sharing around the HLA locus, a candidate locus for embryo survival. We performed an allele-sharing study of 1,592 DZ twin pairs from two independent Australian cohorts, of which 1,561 pairs were informative for linkage on chromosome 6. We also analyzed allele sharing in 336 DZ twin pairs from The Netherlands. We found no evidence of excess allele sharing, either at the HLA locus or in the rest of the genome. In contrast, we found evidence of a small but significant (P = .003 for the Australian sample) genomewide deficit in the proportion of two alleles shared identical by descent among DZ twin pairs. We reconciled conflicting evidence in the literature for excess genomewide allele sharing by performing a simulation study that shows how undetected genotyping errors can lead to an apparent deficit or excess of allele sharing among sibling pairs, dependent on whether parental genotypes are known. Our results imply that gene-mapping studies based on affected sibling pairs that include DZ pairs will not suffer from false-positive results due to loci involved in embryo survival.
AB - Gametic selection during fertilization or the effects of specific genotypes on the viability of embryos may cause a skewed transmission of chromosomes to surviving offspring. A recent analysis of transmission distortion in humans reported significant excess sharing among full siblings. Dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs are a special case of the simultaneous survival of two genotypes, and there have been reports of DZ pairs with excess allele sharing around the HLA locus, a candidate locus for embryo survival. We performed an allele-sharing study of 1,592 DZ twin pairs from two independent Australian cohorts, of which 1,561 pairs were informative for linkage on chromosome 6. We also analyzed allele sharing in 336 DZ twin pairs from The Netherlands. We found no evidence of excess allele sharing, either at the HLA locus or in the rest of the genome. In contrast, we found evidence of a small but significant (P = .003 for the Australian sample) genomewide deficit in the proportion of two alleles shared identical by descent among DZ twin pairs. We reconciled conflicting evidence in the literature for excess genomewide allele sharing by performing a simulation study that shows how undetected genotyping errors can lead to an apparent deficit or excess of allele sharing among sibling pairs, dependent on whether parental genotypes are known. Our results imply that gene-mapping studies based on affected sibling pairs that include DZ pairs will not suffer from false-positive results due to loci involved in embryo survival.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33845196268&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1086/510136
DO - 10.1086/510136
M3 - Article
C2 - 17186463
AN - SCOPUS:33845196268
SN - 0002-9297
VL - 79
SP - 1052
EP - 1058
JO - American journal of human genetics
JF - American journal of human genetics
IS - 6
ER -