Hi all dears. I would be grateful if anyone could help me about generally advantages and disadvantages using of SNP-chips especially in GWAS! I mean how is their coverage, efficiencies and cost benefit ratio in comparison with some other methods like ddRAD and WGS?
We show that 1x WGS is an efficient alternative to imputed GWAS chip
designs for empowering next-generation association studies in complex
traits. We demonstrate that population-scale 1x WGS allows the
interrogation of a large number of low-frequency and rare variants
missed by classical GWAS array imputation, resulting in potential
higher association power.
What the SNP array / chip manufacturers need to understand is that they need to be more generous with the genomic locations that are genotyped on their platforms, and to not just give us a random spread of positions scattered across the genome. If they want to get serious, they'd start to genotype, for example, all ClinVar pathogenic variants and tens of thousands of other variants for which there is evidence of association with disease. I'm sure that they have already had discussions about where they are going with their platforms, and I know that, for example, Affymetrix is not by any means ditching their arrays - I heard this straight from the mouth of the CEO of the company during a meeting, which actually surprised me (they may have since reconsidered).
I believe there is a future for these types of arrays if the manufacturer's 'shape up' and start to take their roles more seriously. We are now at that point for many diseases, i.e., where we have enough evidence accumulated such that a simple array could be used to diagnose various diseases, or at best infer your risk of developing a particular disease. For other complex diseases for which evidence is scant, obviously whole genome sequencing is a favourable option.
Keep in mind that the SNP array technology is also ameanable for copy number detection, which has uses, and in those situations it is actually better to have an even distribution of probes scattered across the genome.
Yes, very aware that it's not a bug, but it's neither helpful. There are undoubtedly millions of regions where the target SNP is far off the key variant that actually modifies, for example, TF binding, which then drives a disease.
Yes. Indeed. SNP arrays are a very rough approximation of the total SNPs. dbSNP contains over 300M human variants, so any SNP chip will cover less than 1% of that.
That is actually a feature of SNP chips, not a bug. Many people would like a genome-wide SNP scan.
If you would like to genotype specific variants, you can order a custom SNP array. That way you can look at the SNPs relevant to your study.
Yes, very aware that it's not a bug, but it's neither helpful. There are undoubtedly millions of regions where the target SNP is far off the key variant that actually modifies, for example, TF binding, which then drives a disease.
Yes. Indeed. SNP arrays are a very rough approximation of the total SNPs. dbSNP contains over 300M human variants, so any SNP chip will cover less than 1% of that.