What proportion of
declared QTL in plants are false?
Paper by
R. Bernardo in TAG 109:419-424, 2004.
Abstract
The
false discovery rate (FDR) is the probability that a quantitative trait locus
(QTL) is false, given that a QTL has been declared. A misconception in QTL
mapping is that the FDR is equal to the comparison-wise significance level, C.
The objective of this simulation study was to determine the FDR in an F2
mapping population, given different numbers of QTL, population sizes, and trait
heritabilities. Markers linked to QTL were detected
by multiple regression of phenotype on marker genotype. Phenotypic selection
and marker-based recurrent selection were compared. The FDR increased as C
increased. Notably, the FDR was often 10–30 times higher than the C level used.
Regardless of the number of QTL, heritability, or size of the genome, the FDR
was 0.01 when C was 0.0001. The FDR increased to 0.82 when C was 0.05,
heritability was low, and only one QTL controlled the trait. An
C of 0.05 led to a low FDR when many QTL (30 or 100) controlled the trait, but
this lower FDR was accompanied by a diminished power to detect QTL. Larger
mapping populations led to both lower a FDR and increased power. Relaxed
significance levels of C=0.1 or 0.2 led to the largest responses to
marker-based recurrent selection, despite the high FDR. To prevent false QTL
from confusing the literature and databases, a detected QTL should, in general,
be reported as a QTL only if it was identified at a stringent significance
level, e.g., C0.0001