Back to Search Start Over

Population-scale proteome variation in human induced pluripotent stem cells

Authors :
Mirauta, Bogdan Andrei
Seaton, Daniel D
Bensaddek, Dalila
Brenes, Alejandro
Bonder, Marc Jan
Kilpinen, Helena
Agu, Chukwuma A
Alderton, Alex
Danecek, Petr
Denton, Rachel
Durbin, Richard
Gaffney, Daniel J
Goncalves, Angela
Halai, Reena
Harper, Sarah
Kirton, Christopher M
Kolb-Kokocinski, Anja
Leha, Andreas
McCarthy, Shane A
Memari, Yasin
Patel, Minal
Birney, Ewan
Casale, Francesco Paolo
Clarke, Laura
Harrison, Peter W
Streeter, Ian
Denovi, Davide
Stegle, Oliver
Lamond, Angus I
Meleckyte, Ruta
Moens, Natalie
Watt, Fiona M
Ouwehand, Willem H
Beales, Philip
Mirauta, Bogdan Andrei [0000-0002-9733-292X]
Bonder, Marc Jan [0000-0002-8431-3180]
Kilpinen, Helena [0000-0001-6692-6154]
Stegle, Oliver [0000-0002-8818-7193]
Lamond, Angus I [0000-0001-6204-6045]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Helsinki Institute of Life Science HiLIFE
Source :
eLife, eLife, Vol 9 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd, 2020.

Abstract

Human disease phenotypes are driven primarily by alterations in protein expression and/or function. To date, relatively little is known about the variability of the human proteome in populations and how this relates to variability in mRNA expression and to disease loci. Here, we present the first comprehensive proteomic analysis of human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC), a key cell type for disease modelling, analysing 202 iPSC lines derived from 151 donors, with integrated transcriptome and genomic sequence data from the same lines. We characterised the major genetic and non-genetic determinants of proteome variation across iPSC lines and assessed key regulatory mechanisms affecting variation in protein abundance. We identified 654 protein quantitative trait loci (pQTLs) in iPSCs, including disease-linked variants in protein-coding sequences and variants with trans regulatory effects. These include pQTL linked to GWAS variants that cannot be detected at the mRNA level, highlighting the utility of dissecting pQTL at peptide level resolution.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
eLife, eLife, Vol 9 (2020)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c18366cc1922197e4e5932603934bd57