I noticed in the qtl2data/Doex/Doex_covar.csv file that the only cross information (as far as I can tell) for the DO mice comes in the form of the number of generations, "ngen", in the breeding program, and no separate cross_info file is present.
Combining this observation with the guideline in the Kbroman.org/qtl2/assets/vignettes/input_files materials about how cross_info information for more complex crosses necessarily "spans multiple columns" and is required to be set up in advance (as no translation of encodings will be performed), I have a question about how DO mouse cross info is handled:
Since DO is a relatively complex cross system among CC mice, is qtl2 specifically designed to use ngen information in relation to the DO mice or other similar crossing programs to simplify specification of cross info?
That ^^ is my main question, but on a more speculative side note, in a DO study, how helpful could it be toward strengthening the QTL analysis to have recorded information on the pedigree and breeding of each and every mouse, starting with the initial CC founders as they interbreed approximately randomly, and continuing over the generations as a given DO stock proliferates? JAX lab may not record this information or make it available for each mouse, and it may be difficult to do so, but I wonder how much more useful it could be in attributing phenotypic effects to a specific QTL variant in a given founder line than keeping track only of the number of generations in the DO breeding program.
I agree with Karl. I don’t think that pedigree information would improve the mapping. We’re performing linkage mapping using the inferred haplotypes from the HMM. As long as those are good, we’re associating phenotypes with founder alleles at each marker. I’m also not sure that we even have detailed pedigree information. We randomize breeding pairs carefully at each outcrossing generation, and we track siblings when shipping, but otherwise I’m not sure how much detail is retained.
Dan
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About 5 to 10% of the DO matings are unproductive. We don’t know why, so it’s hard to ascribe to NZO. In spite of the careful randomized mating, allele frequencies in the DO are drifting form the ideal 1/8th contribution at all loci. A low founder allele contribution at a given locus makes it harder to detect and effect driven by that founder allele. I’m not sure what to do about this from a QTL mapping standpoint, other than what we do already. But if this is the direction of your research, you could dive into it and see what you come up with.
Dan
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