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Published online before print March 3, 2008, 10.1101/gr.071571.107
Genome Res. 18:640-643, 2008
©2008 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; ISSN 1088-9051/08 $5.00
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WGAViewer: Software for genomic annotation of whole genome association studies

Dongliang Ge1,2,5, Kunlin Zhang3, Anna C. Need1, Olivier Martin4, Jacques Fellay1,2, Thomas J. Urban1,2, Amalio Telenti2,3, and David B. Goldstein1,2,5

1 Center for Population Genomics & Pharmacogenetics, Institute for Genome Sciences & Policy, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA; 2 Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA; 3 Institute of Microbiology, University Hospital, University of Lausanne, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland; 4 Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland

To meet the immediate need for a framework of post-whole genome association (WGA) annotation, we have developed WGAViewer, a suite of JAVA software tools that provides a user-friendly interface to automatically annotate, visualize, and interpret the set of P-values emerging from a WGA study. Most valuably, it can be used to highlight possible functional mechanisms in an automatic manner, for example, by directly or indirectly implicating a polymorphism with an apparent link to gene expression, and help to generate hypotheses concerning the possible biological bases of observed associations. The easily interpretable diagrams can then be used to identify the associations that seem most likely to be biologically relevant, and to select genomic regions that may need to be resequenced in a search for candidate causal variants. In this report, we used our recently completed study on host control of HIV-1 viral load during the asymptomatic set point period as an illustration for the heuristic annotation of this software and its contributive role in a successful WGA project.


5 Corresponding authors.

E-mail d.ge{at}duke.edu; fax (919) 668-6787.

E-mail d.goldstein{at}duke.edu; fax (919) 668-6787.

[Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org. WGAViewer is available at http://www.genome.duke.edu/centers/pg2/downloads/wgaviewer.php.]

Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.071571.107.


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