Title
Accurate HLA type inference using a weighted similarity graph.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The human leukocyte antigen system (HLA) contains many highly variable genes. HLA genes play an important role in the human immune system, and HLA gene matching is crucial for the success of human organ transplantations. Numerous studies have demonstrated that variation in HLA genes is associated with many autoimmune, inflammatory and infectious diseases. However, typing HLA genes by serology or PCR is time consuming and expensive, which limits large-scale studies involving HLA genes. Since it is much easier and cheaper to obtain single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotype data, accurate computational algorithms to infer HLA gene types from SNP genotype data are in need. To infer HLA types from SNP genotypes, the first step is to infer SNP haplotypes from genotypes. However, for the same SNP genotype data set, the haplotype configurations inferred by different methods are usually inconsistent, and it is often difficult to decide which one is true. RESULTS: In this paper, we design an accurate HLA gene type inference algorithm by utilizing SNP genotype data from pedigrees, known HLA gene types of some individuals and the relationship between inferred SNP haplotypes and HLA gene types. Given a set of haplotypes inferred from the genotypes of a population consisting of many pedigrees, the algorithm first constructs a weighted similarity graph based on a new haplotype similarity measure and derives constraint edges from known HLA gene types. Based on the principle that different HLA gene alleles should have different background haplotypes, the algorithm searches for an optimal labeling of all the haplotypes with unknown HLA gene types such that the total weight among the same HLA gene types is maximized. To deal with ambiguous haplotype solutions, we use a genetic algorithm to select haplotype configurations that tend to maximize the same optimization criterion. Our experiments on a previously typed subset of the HapMap data show that the algorithm is highly accurate, achieving an accuracy of 96% for gene HLA-A, 95% for HLA-B, 97% for HLA-C, 84% for HLA-DRB1, 98% for HLA-DQA1 and 97% for HLA-DQB1 in a leave-one-out test. CONCLUSIONS: Our algorithm can infer HLA gene types from neighboring SNP genotype data accurately. Compared with a recent approach on the same input data, our algorithm achieved a higher accuracy. The code of our algorithm is available to the public for free upon request to the corresponding authors.
Year
DOI
Venue
2010
10.1186/1471-2105-11-S11-S10
BMC Bioinformatics
Keywords
Field
DocType
single nucleotide polymorphism,haplotypes,microarrays,hla antigens,alleles,genotype,bioinformatics,human leukocyte antigen,type inference,algorithms,human immune system,infectious disease,organ transplantation,genetic algorithm
HLA-DQ Antigen,Genotype,HLA-B Antigens,Biology,Haplotype,Single-nucleotide polymorphism,Bioinformatics,Human leukocyte antigen,Genetics,SNP,DNA microarray
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
11
S-11
null
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
14
0.64
5
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Minzhu Xie1918.16
Jing Li249850.65
Tao Jiang31809155.32