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A Genome Scan for Eye Color in 502 Twin Families: Most Variation is due to a QTL on Chromosome 15q

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2012

Gu Zhu
Affiliation:
Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane.
David M. Evans
Affiliation:
Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane.
David L. Duffy
Affiliation:
Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane.
Grant W. Montgomery
Affiliation:
Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane.
Sarah E. Medland
Affiliation:
Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane.
Nathan A. Gillespie
Affiliation:
Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane.
Kelly R. Ewen
Affiliation:
Australian Genome Research Facility, Melbourne.
Mary Jewell
Affiliation:
Center for Inherited Disease Research, Baltimore.
Yew Wah Liew
Affiliation:
Australian Red Cross Blood Service, Brisbane.
Nicholas K. Hayward
Affiliation:
Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane.
Richard A. Sturm
Affiliation:
Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland, Brisbane.
Jeffrey M. Trent
Affiliation:
National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, and Translational Genomics Research Institute, Phoenix.
Nicholas G. Martin*
Affiliation:
Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane. nickM@qimr.edu.au
*
*Address for correspondence: Nick Martin, Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane Qld 4029, Australia.

Abstract

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We have rated eye color on a 3-point scale (1 = blue/grey, 2 = hazel/green, 3 = brown) in 502 twin families and carried out a 5–10 cM genome scan (400–757 markers). We analyzed eye color as a threshold trait and performed multipoint sib pair linkage analysis using variance components analysis in Mx. A lod of 19.2 was found at the marker D15S1002, less than 1 cM from OCA2, which has been previously implicated in eye color variation. We estimate that 74% of variance in eye color liability is due to this QTL and a further 18% due to polygenic effects. However, a large shoulder on this peak suggests that other loci affecting eye color may be telomeric of OCA2 and inflating the QTL estimate. No other peaks reached genome-wide significance, although lods > 2 were seen on 5p and 14q and lods >1 were additionally seen on chromosomes 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 17 and 18. Most of these secondary peaks were reduced or eliminated when we repeated the scan as a two locus analysis with the 15q linkage included, although this does not necessarily exclude them as false positives. We also estimated the interaction between the 15q QTL and the other marker locus but there was only minor evidence for additive [.dotmath] additive epistasis. Elaborating the analysis to the full two-locus model including non-additive main effects and interactions did not strengthen the evidence for epistasis. We conclude that most variation in eye color in Europeans is due to polymorphism in OCA2 but that there may be modifiers at several other loci.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2004