Published September 13, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Causal interpretations of family GWAS in the presence of heterogeneous effects

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Columbia University
  • 3. University of California, Davis

Description

Family-based genome-wide association studies (GWASs) are often claimed to provide an unbiased estimate of the average causal effects (or average treatment effects; ATEs) of alleles, on the basis of an analogy between the random transmission of alleles from parents to children and a randomized controlled trial. We show that this claim does not hold in general. Because Mendelian segregation only randomizes alleles among children of heterozygotes, the effects of alleles in the children of homozygotes are not observable. This feature will matter if an allele has different average effects in the children of homozygotes and heterozygotes, as can arise in the presence of gene-by-environment interactions, gene-by-gene interactions, or differences in linkage disequilibrium patterns. At a single locus, family-based GWAS can be thought of as providing an unbiased estimate of the average effect in the children of heterozygotes (i.e., a local average treatment effect; LATE). This interpretation does not extend to polygenic scores (PGSs), however, because different sets of SNPs are heterozygous in each family. Therefore, other than under specific conditions, the within-family regression slope of a PGS cannot be assumed to provide an unbiased estimate of the LATE for any subset or weighted average of families. In practice, the potential biases of a family-based GWAS are likely smaller than those that can arise from confounding in a standard, population-based GWAS, and so family studies remain important for the dissection of genetic contributions to phenotypic variation. Nonetheless, their causal interpretation is less straightforward than has been widely appreciated.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2401379121
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:13547

Funding

National Institutes of Health
R35 GM136290
National Institutes of Health
R01 HG011432
The Branco Weiss Fellowship

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution