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The architecture of gene regulatory variation across multiple human tissues: the MuTHER study.

Authors :
Alexandra C Nica
Leopold Parts
Daniel Glass
James Nisbet
Amy Barrett
Magdalena Sekowska
Mary Travers
Simon Potter
Elin Grundberg
Kerrin Small
Asa K Hedman
Veronique Bataille
Jordana Tzenova Bell
Gabriela Surdulescu
Antigone S Dimas
Catherine Ingle
Frank O Nestle
Paola di Meglio
Josine L Min
Alicja Wilk
Christopher J Hammond
Neelam Hassanali
Tsun-Po Yang
Stephen B Montgomery
Steve O'Rahilly
Cecilia M Lindgren
Krina T Zondervan
Nicole Soranzo
Inês Barroso
Richard Durbin
Kourosh Ahmadi
Panos Deloukas
Mark I McCarthy
Emmanouil T Dermitzakis
Timothy D Spector
MuTHER Consortium
Source :
PLoS Genetics, Vol 7, Iss 2, p e1002003 (2011)
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2011.

Abstract

While there have been studies exploring regulatory variation in one or more tissues, the complexity of tissue-specificity in multiple primary tissues is not yet well understood. We explore in depth the role of cis-regulatory variation in three human tissues: lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCL), skin, and fat. The samples (156 LCL, 160 skin, 166 fat) were derived simultaneously from a subset of well-phenotyped healthy female twins of the MuTHER resource. We discover an abundance of cis-eQTLs in each tissue similar to previous estimates (858 or 4.7% of genes). In addition, we apply factor analysis (FA) to remove effects of latent variables, thus more than doubling the number of our discoveries (1,822 eQTL genes). The unique study design (Matched Co-Twin Analysis--MCTA) permits immediate replication of eQTLs using co-twins (93%-98%) and validation of the considerable gain in eQTL discovery after FA correction. We highlight the challenges of comparing eQTLs between tissues. After verifying previous significance threshold-based estimates of tissue-specificity, we show their limitations given their dependency on statistical power. We propose that continuous estimates of the proportion of tissue-shared signals and direct comparison of the magnitude of effect on the fold change in expression are essential properties that jointly provide a biologically realistic view of tissue-specificity. Under this framework we demonstrate that 30% of eQTLs are shared among the three tissues studied, while another 29% appear exclusively tissue-specific. However, even among the shared eQTLs, a substantial proportion (10%-20%) have significant differences in the magnitude of fold change between genotypic classes across tissues. Our results underline the need to account for the complexity of eQTL tissue-specificity in an effort to assess consequences of such variants for complex traits.

Subjects

Subjects :
Genetics
QH426-470

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15537390 and 15537404
Volume :
7
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6d41d2e4874ff2b5d076c62e716ffe
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002003