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Deep genotype imputation captures virtually all heritability of autoimmune vitiligo

Genevieve H. L. Roberts, Stephanie A. Santorico, Richard A. Spritz

2020Human Molecular Genetics27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Autoimmune vitiligo is a complex disease involving polygenic risk from at least 50 loci previously identified by genome-wide association studies. The objectives of this study were to estimate and compare vitiligo heritability in European-derived patients using both family-based and 'deep imputation' genotype-based approaches. We estimated family-based heritability (h2FAM) by vitiligo recurrence among a total 8034 first-degree relatives (3776 siblings, 4258 parents or offspring) of 2122 unrelated vitiligo probands. We estimated genotype-based heritability (h2SNP) by deep imputation to Haplotype Reference Consortium and the 1000 Genomes Project data in unrelated 2812 vitiligo cases and 37 079 controls genotyped genome wide, achieving high-quality imputation from markers with minor allele frequency (MAF) as low as 0.0001. Heritability estimated by both approaches was exceedingly high; h2FAM = 0.75-0.83 and h2SNP = 0.78. These estimates are statistically identical, indicating there is essentially no remaining 'missing heritability' for vitiligo. Overall, ~70% of h2SNP is represented by common variants (MAF > 0.01) and 30% by rare variants. These results demonstrate that essentially all vitiligo heritable risk is captured by array-based genotyping and deep imputation. These findings suggest that vitiligo may provide a particularly tractable model for investigation of complex disease genetic architecture and predictive aspects of personalized medicine.

Topics & Concepts

VitiligoImputation (statistics)HeritabilityMissing heritability problemGenotypingGenome-wide association study1000 Genomes ProjectGenotypeMinor allele frequencyGeneticsConcordanceHaplotypeGenetic architectureGenetic associationBiologyMedicineAllele frequencySingle-nucleotide polymorphismQuantitative trait locusMissing dataStatisticsGeneMathematicsmelanin and skin pigmentationAtherosclerosis and Cardiovascular DiseasesGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestock
Deep genotype imputation captures virtually all heritability of autoimmune vitiligo | Litcius