TY - JOUR T1 - Neighbor GWAS: incorporating neighbor genotypic identity into genome-wide association studies of field herbivory JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/845735 SP - 845735 AU - Yasuhiro Sato AU - Eiji Yamamoto AU - Kentaro K. Shimizu AU - Atsushi J. Nagano Y1 - 2020/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/10/15/845735.abstract N2 - An increasing number of field studies have shown that the phenotype of an individual plant depends not only on its genotype but also on those of neighboring plants; however, this fact is not taken into consideration in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). Based on the Ising model of ferromagnetism, we incorporated neighbor genotypic identity into a regression model, named “Neighbor GWAS”. Our simulations showed that the effective range of neighbor effects could be estimated using an observed phenotype from when the proportion of phenotypic variation explained (PVE) by neighbor effects peaked. The spatial scale of the first nearest neighbors gave the maximum power to detect the causal variants responsible for neighbor effects, unless their effective range was too broad. However, if the effective range of the neighbor effects was broad and minor allele frequencies were low, there was collinearity between the self and neighbor effects. To suppress the false positive detection of neighbor effects, the fixed effect and variance components involved in the neighbor effects should be tested in comparison with a standard GWAS model. We applied neighbor GWAS to field herbivory data from 199 accessions of Arabidopsis thaliana and found that neighbor effects explained 8% more of the PVE of the observed damage than standard GWAS. The neighbor GWAS method provides a novel tool that could facilitate the analysis of complex traits in spatially structured environments and is available as an R package at CRAN (https://cran.rproject.org/package=rNeighborGWAS).Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest. ER -