JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, NON-P.H.S.
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Genomic Prediction from Multiple-Trait Bayesian Regression Methods Using Mixture Priors.

Genetics 2018 May
Bayesian multiple-regression methods incorporating different mixture priors for marker effects are used widely in genomic prediction. Improvement in prediction accuracies from using those methods, such as BayesB, BayesC, and BayesC π , have been shown in single-trait analyses with both simulated and real data. These methods have been extended to multi-trait analyses, but only under the restrictive assumption that a locus simultaneously affects all the traits or none of them. This assumption is not biologically meaningful, especially in multi-trait analyses involving many traits. In this paper, we develop and implement a more general multi-trait BayesC[Formula: see text] and BayesB methods allowing a broader range of mixture priors. Our methods allow a locus to affect any combination of traits, e.g. , in a 5-trait analysis, the "restrictive" model only allows two situations, whereas ours allow all 32 situations. Further, we compare our methods to single-trait methods and the "restrictive" multi-trait formulation using real and simulated data. In the real data analysis, higher prediction accuracies were observed from both our new broad-based multi-trait methods and the "restrictive" formulation. The broad-based and restrictive multi-trait methods showed similar prediction accuracies. In the simulated data analysis, higher prediction accuracies to the "restrictive" method were observed from our general multi-trait methods for intermediate training population size. The software tool JWAS offers open-source routines to perform these analyses.

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