Common Regulatory Variation Impacts Gene Expression in a Cell Type–Dependent Manner

Antigone S. Dimas(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Samuel Deutsch(University of Geneva), Barbara E. Stranger(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Stephen B. Montgomery(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Christelle Borel(University of Geneva), Homa Attar-Cohen(University of Geneva), Catherine Ingle(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Claude Beazley(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Maria Gutierrez Arcelus(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Magdalena Sekowska(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Marilyne Gagnebin(University of Geneva), James Nisbett(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Panos Deloukas(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Emmanouil T. Dermitzakis(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Stylianos E. Antonarakis(University of Geneva)
Science
July 30, 2009
Cited by 766Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Studies correlating genetic variation to gene expression facilitate the interpretation of common human phenotypes and disease. As functional variants may be operating in a tissue-dependent manner, we performed gene expression profiling and association with genetic variants (single-nucleotide polymorphisms) on three cell types of 75 individuals. We detected cell type-specific genetic effects, with 69 to 80% of regulatory variants operating in a cell type-specific manner, and identified multiple expressive quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) per gene, unique or shared among cell types and positively correlated with the number of transcripts per gene. Cell type-specific eQTLs were found at larger distances from genes and at lower effect size, similar to known enhancers. These data suggest that the complete regulatory variant repertoire can only be uncovered in the context of cell-type specificity.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis