Vol. 10, Issue 1, 105-115, January 2000
METHODS
Pooled Genotyping of Microsatellite Markers in Parent-Offspring Trios
George
Kirov,1,4
Nigel
Williams,1
Pak
Sham,2
Nick
Craddock,3 and
Michael J.
Owen1
1 Neuropsychiatric Genetics Unit, University of Wales
College of Medicine, Heath Park, Cardiff CF4 4XN, UK;
2 Institute of Psychiatry, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8AF, UK;
3 Department of Psychiatry, University of Birmingham, Queen
Elizabeth Psychiatric Hospital, Birmingham B15 2QZ, UK
We studied the extent to which genotyping of simple sequence repeat
polymorphisms (SSRs) in pooled DNA samples can be used to predict
differences in allele frequencies between parents and their affected
offspring. We also developed a simple method of correction for the
effects of stutter and differential amplification on the analysis of
SSRs in pooled DNA samples based on widely available software. We
genotyped individually eight polymorphic microsatellite markers in 110 parent-offspring trios affected with bipolar affective disorder (BP).
Analysis of pooled DNA samples predicted very accurately the
differences in individual allele frequency distributions between
children and their parents. The mean error was <1% (range
0%-3.2%) when marker-specific corrections for stutter and
differential amplification were performed. We show that if an
individual allele is significantly preferentially transmitted from
parents to affected offspring, the difference in the frequency of that
allele would be sufficiently large to be detected with pooling in most
situations. We propose recommendations for disequilibrium mapping with
pooling in which both case-control samples and trios are used in an
initial screen and markers are genotyped individually only if they
satisfy very relaxed criteria for statistical significance. The use of
case-control samples should reduce the false-negative rate as the
differences in allele frequencies between cases and controls are twice
as high in the presence of the same genetic effect. The use of trios
will confirm or reject any suggested differences, thus reducing the
false-positive rate that can be created by hidden population stratification.
4
Corresponding author.
10:105-115 ©2000 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/00 $5.00