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An Efficient Multiple-Testing Adjustment for eQTL Studies that Accounts for Linkage Disequilibrium between Variants

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eigenMT

An Efficient Multiple-Testing Adjustment for eQTL Studies that Accounts for Linkage Disequilibrium between Variants

Introduction

eigenMT is a computationally efficient multiple testing correction method for cis-eQTL studies. Typically, modern cis-eQTL studies correct for multiple testing across thousands of variants for a single gene using permutations. This correction method, though accurate, requires a high computational cost on the order of days to weeks for large numbers of permutations and/or large sample sizes. Our method reduces this computational burden by orders of magnitude while maintaining high accuracy when compared to permutations. To accomplish this, our method attempts to estimate the number of effective tests performed for a given gene by directly accounting for the LD relationship among the tested variants.

Download

Begin by downloading or cloning this respository. eigenMT runs as a stand-alone python script. It requires an active installaton of python (version 2.7 or higher) to be installed. To download and install a python distribution, there are a few convenient options:

These bundled installations already include a number of modules required for running eigenMT including:

Again, these modules should come pre-packaged in one of the bundled python installations above. If you decide to install these packages yourself, please see the listed websites for detailed instructions.

Finally, if you wish to run the Matrix eQTL example script, you will need to install the Matrix eQTL package, which can be accomplished simply by opening an R session and running the following command:

install.packages('MatrixEQTL')

Input

A typical run will have the following command line format:

python eigenMT.py --CHROM <chromosome ID>
	--QTL <Matrix eQTL SNP-gene tests file> \
	--GEN <Matrix eQTL genotype matrix> \
	--POS <Matrix eQTL genotype position file> \
	--var_thresh [variance explained threshold, default 0.99] \
	--OUT <output filename> \
	--window [window size, default 200]

eigenMT was designed to fit within a pipeline utilizing Matrix eQTL (Shabalin, Bioinformatics 2012) for eQTL calling. The input fields are defined as follows.

Argument Description
CHROM Chromosome ID. Indicates which chromosome the analysis will be performed on. Must match the ID used in the Matrix eQTL SNP-gene tests file.
QTL Filename for Matrix eQTL SNP-gene tests file. See example/cis.qtls.txt for an example.
GEN Genotype matrix in Matrix eQTL format. Can accept either hardcoded or dosage based genotypes. Missing genotypes must be encoded as NA and will be imputed to the mean genotype during correction. See example/genotypes.txt for an example.
GENPOS Matrix eQTL genotype position file. See example/positions.txt for an example.
var_thresh Threshold for amount of variance explained in the genotype correlation matrix. Default is 99% variance explained. Increasing this threshold will increase estimates of effective number of tests (M_eff) and decrease accuracy of the approximation.
OUT Output filename. Output format is described below.
window Window size parameter. Determines what size of disjoint windows to split genotype matrices for each gene into. Default is 200 SNPs. We recommend using a window size of at least 50 SNPs up to 200 SNPs to balance accuracy and speed.
cis_dist Threshold for bp distance from the gene TSS to perform multiple testing correction. Default is 1e6.
external Logical indicating whether the provided genotype matrix is different from the one originally used to test for cis-eQTLs.

Although we have designed our software to utilize output directly from Matrix eQTL, eigenMT can handle a more general QTL input file. This more general input format need only have three columns: 1. the SNP ID, 2. the gene ID, and 3. the cis-eQTL p-value. This file must contain a header line with the p-value column indicated by p-value.

Output

The output file is in tab-separated format with the following columns.

Column Description
1 variant ID
2 Gene ID
3 estimate of effect size BETA from Matrix eQTL
4 T-statistic from Matrix eQTL
5 p-value from Matrix eQTL
6 FDR estimate from Matrix eQTL
7 eigenMT corrected p-value
8 estimated number of independent tests for the gene

Note: The first 5 columns of the output will correspond to the typical Matrix eQTL output. Also, each tested gene will appear once in the output file with its most significant SNP and the eigenMT corrected p-value.

Example

We offer a small example dataset for testing. We provide genotype and normalized gene expression matrices with corresponding position files in Matrix eQTL format. This genotype matrix is for chromosome 19 for the EUR373 samples as part of the GEUVADIS study. The normalized expression matrix covers the first 100 genes on chromosome 19 with quantification in the GEUVADIS dataset. The expression matrix has been quantile normalized to a standard normal distribution following variance stabilization by DESeq2 and removal of 30 PEER factors. We also provide a sample of the cis-eQTL tests performed for these samples using Matrix eQTL. This sample variant-gene tests file represents 100 genes. To extract the example dataset, run

tar -zxvf example.tar.gz

We provide an example R script for running Matrix eQTL. To learn more about using Matrix eQTL, please refer to the package documentation on CRAN or the original paper. To generate the file of cis-eQTL tests, use the following command:

Rscript example/MatrixEQTL.R --SNP example/genotypes.txt \
	--GE example/phenotypes.txt \
	--snploc example/gen.positions.txt \
	--geneloc example/phe.positions.txt \
	--OutputFilePath example/cis.eqtls.txt \
	--cisDist 1e6 \
	--ANOVA FALSE \
	--pValue 1 > example/matrix.eqtl.log

To run eigenMT on the example data, use the following command:

python eigenMT.py --CHROM 19 \
	--QTL example/cis.eqtls.txt \
	--GEN example/genotypes.txt \
	--GENPOS example/gen.positions.txt \
	--PHEPOS example/phe.positions.txt \
	--OUT example/exampleOut.txt

Note: this example uses the default settings for window size (200 SNPs) and variance explained threshold (.99).

To visualize the results of the correction, use the following command:

Rscript example/compareToEmpirical.R

This R script will generate a PDF with three figures:

  1. A plot of the eigenMT corrected P-values (y-axis) against the empirical P-values from 10000 permutations (x-axis).
  2. The same plot as in (1) but with a -log10 transformation of the x- and y- axes.
  3. The same plot as in (2) zoomed in to exclude empirical P-values = 1. In this final plot, the points should be strongly correlated and should fall slightly below the diagonal (for the most part).

External genotype data

Our method offers the ability to perform multiple testing correction using a genotype matrix from a separate sample population than the one initially used for cis-eQTL testing. It is important to note that this external genotype matrix should come from the same background population as the one under study. For example, if cis-eQTL testing is performed in samples of European ancestry, then any external genotype matrix used should come from a similar European population. We have shown that using genotype data from studies with larger sample sizes can improve the accuracy of our method compared to using the genotype data for the study. Genotype data from larger studies will provide better estimates of the LD structure for variants around each gene, improving our estimates of the effective number of tests.

Population stratification and other covariates

We recommend first removing the effects of population stratification (genotype PCs, population or ancestry assignments) and other covariates (age, gender, PEER factors, etc) from the expression matrix. We have shown that by first removing these effects and then performing cis-eQTL calling on the inverse rank normalized residuals, we maintain conservativeness and accuracy.

Citation

Davis JR, Fresard L, Knowles DA, Pala M, Bustamante CD, Battle A, Montgomery SB (2015). An Efficient Multiple-Testing Adjustment for eQTL Studies that Accounts for Linkage Disequilibrium between Variants. The American Journal of Human Genetics, 98(1), 216–224. doi: (http://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.11.021)

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