knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#", fig.width=7, fig.height=5 ) library(knitr)
library(mvMAPIT)
Data are simulated sample genotypes with $p$ single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and $n$ samples togeter with some quantitative traits.
Create a matrix that contains underdetermined genotype data of random minor allele counts encoded as 0, 1, and 2.
We control the minor allele frequency maf
to be greater than 0.05.
set.seed(1234) n_samples <- 2938 n_snp <- 5747 maf <- 0.05 + 0.45 * runif(n_snp) random_minor_allele_counts <- (runif(n_samples * n_snp) < maf) + (runif(n_samples * n_snp) < maf) genotype_data <- matrix(random_minor_allele_counts, nrow = n_samples, ncol = n_snp, byrow = TRUE, ) sample_names <- seq_len(n_samples) %>% sprintf(fmt = "id%04d") snp_names <- seq_len(n_snp) %>% sprintf(fmt = "snp%04d") colnames(genotype_data) <- snp_names rownames(genotype_data) <- sample_names
The entries in the genotype matrix are:
An example genotype matrix could look like this:
|Sample|SNP 1|SNP 2|...|SNP p| |------|-----|-----|---|-----| | 1 | 0 | 1 |...| 2 | | 2 | 1 | 0 |...| 0 | | ... | ... | ... |...| 1 | | n | 2 | 2 |...| 1 |
The simulated traits will be based on the genotype data simulated in the previous
step. Simulations are implemented in the function simulate_traits
.
The causal SNPs as well as their effect sizes will be drawn at random.
For simulating traits, we need to control the following simulation parameters.
Simulation Parameters:
n
: number of samplesp
: number of SNPs or variantsd
: number of traitsPVE
: phenotypic variance explained/broad-sense heritability ($H^2$)rho
: portion of $H^2$ that is contributed by the marginal (additive) effectsn_causal
: total number of SNPs with any effects on traits.n_trait_specific
: number of epistatic SNPs that affect a single trait.n_pleiotropic
: number of epistatic SNPs that affect all traits.group_ratio_pleiotropic
: ratio by which to split the epistatic SNPs into groups, e.g. 1:1, 1:3.epistatic_correlation
: correlation between the epistatic effects.seed <- 67132 d <- 2 PVE <- 0.6 rho <- 0.2 n_causal <- 1000 n_trait_specific <- 0 n_pleiotropic <- 10 group_ratio_pleiotropic <- 1 epistatic_correlation <- 0.9 maf <- 0.05 simulated_data <- simulate_traits( genotype_data, n_causal = n_causal, n_trait_specific = n_trait_specific, n_pleiotropic = n_pleiotropic, d = d, H2 = PVE, rho = rho, epistatic_correlation = epistatic_correlation, group_ratio_pleiotropic = group_ratio_pleiotropic, maf_threshold = maf, seed = seed )
We randomly choose causal variants that are split into three groups:
In the simulations carried out in this study, SNPs interact between sets. SNPs in the first group interact with SNPs in the second group, but do not interact with variants in their own group, and vice versa. One may view the SNPs in the first set as the “hubs” in an interaction map. We are reminded that interaction (epistatic) effects are different from additive effects. The following image illustrates the simulation of interactions.
{width=80%}
NOTE: All causal SNPs in both the second and third groups have additive effects and are involved in pairwise interactions, while causal SNPs in the first set only have additive effects.
The general simulation scheme for interactions follows the methods outlined in Crawford et al. (2017)\cite{crawford_detecting_2017}. For the data representing the null hypothesis of no epistasis present, 1000 SNPs without rare variants are sampled from the genotype data. The effect sizes of the causal SNPs then are sampled independently from a multivariate normal distribution according to equation \ref{eq:null_simulations_beta}.
\begin{equation}\label{eq:null_simulations_beta} \mathbf{b}i \sim \mathcal{N}{d}\left(0, \mathbf{U}\right) \end{equation}
As parameter of the simulations, $\mathbf{U}$ describes the covariance between the additive effects of the causal SNPs on the $d$ different traits. The effects of all other SNPs are set to zero.
In order to simulate pleiotropy, the number of desired pleiotropic SNPs is sampled from the set of causal SNPs. These SNPs are then included in simulating interactions for every trait. Additionally, trait specific SNPs are sampled independently for each trait from the causal SNPs without the pleiotropic SNPs.
The interactions are modeled by selecting the number of desired SNPs that have non-zero pairwise interaction effects. These SNPs then are split into two groups. Each SNP from one group is simulated to interact with each SNP of the other group but not with any SNP within the same group that it was assigned to. This results in $n_1 \cdot n_2$ epistatic interactions, with $n_i$ the number of SNPs in group i. For all these interactions, random effects are sampled from the multivariate normal distribution given in \ref{eq:simulations_alpha}.
\begin{equation}\label{eq:simulations_alpha} \mathbf{a}i \sim \mathcal{N}{d}\left(0, \mathbf{V}\right) \end{equation}
Analogously, $\mathbf{V}$ is the covariance between the pariwise epistatic effects of the causal SNPs on the $d$ different traits. The portion of the variance $\mathbf{E}$ that is not due to heritable effects is simulated as multivariate normal with no correlation. The effects of the SNPs and interactions are collected in matrices $\mathbf{A}$ and $\mathbf{B}$. The matrices $\mathbf{X}$ and $\mathbf{W}$ contain the genotype data of the causal SNPs and interactions. With these effects, the phenotypes then are simulated according to equation \ref{eq:simulation_mapit}.
\begin{equation}\label{eq:simulation_mapit} \mathbf{Y} = \mathbf{X}\mathbf{B} + \mathbf{W}\mathbf{A} + \mathbf{E} \end{equation}
For each trait independently, the variance components are scaled such that the variance can be partitioned according to equation \ref{eq:simulation_var_comp}.
\begin{align}\label{eq:simulation_var_comp} \mathbf{Y} &= \mathbf{Y}{X} + \mathbf{Y}{W} + \mathbf{E} \ \mathrm{var}(\mathbf{Y}) &= \mathrm{var}(\mathbf{Y}{X}) + \mathrm{var}(\mathbf{Y}{W}) + \mathrm{var}(\mathbf{E}) \ &= \rho \cdot H^2 + (1 - \rho) \cdot H^2 + (1 - H^2) \ &= 1 \end{align}
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