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Regulatory sites for splicing in human basal ganglia are enriched for disease-relevant information.

Authors :
Guelfi, Sebastian
D'Sa, Karishma
Botía, Juan A.
Vandrovcova, Jana
Reynolds, Regina H.
Zhang, David
Trabzuni, Daniah
Collado-Torres, Leonardo
Thomason, Andrew
Quijada Leyton, Pedro
Gagliano Taliun, Sarah A.
Nalls, Mike A.
International Parkinson's Disease Genomics Consortium (IPDGC)
Noyce, Alastair J.
Nicolas, Aude
Cookson, Mark R.
Bandres-Ciga, Sara
Gibbs, J. Raphael
Hernandez, Dena G.
Singleton, Andrew B.
Source :
Nature Communications; 2/25/2020, Vol. 11 Issue 1, p1-16, 16p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies have generated an increasing number of common genetic variants associated with neurological and psychiatric disease risk. An improved understanding of the genetic control of gene expression in human brain is vital considering this is the likely modus operandum for many causal variants. However, human brain sampling complexities limit the explanatory power of brain-related expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) and allele-specific expression (ASE) signals. We address this, using paired genomic and transcriptomic data from putamen and substantia nigra from 117 human brains, interrogating regulation at different RNA processing stages and uncovering novel transcripts. We identify disease-relevant regulatory loci, find that splicing eQTLs are enriched for regulatory information of neuron-specific genes, that ASEs provide cell-specific regulatory information with evidence for cellular specificity, and that incomplete annotation of the brain transcriptome limits interpretation of risk loci for neuropsychiatric disease. This resource of regulatory data is accessible through our web server, http://braineacv2.inf.um.es/. Regulation of gene expression and splicing are thought to be tissue-specific. Here, the authors obtain genomic and transcriptomic data from putamen and substantia nigra of 117 neurologically healthy human brains and find that splicing eQTLs are enriched for neuron-specific regulatory information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141916432
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-14483-x