Heritability enrichment of specifically expressed genes identifies disease-relevant tissues and cell types

Hilary K. Finucane(Broad Institute), Yakir Reshef(Harvard University), Verneri Anttila(Broad Institute), Kamil Slowikowski(Broad Institute), Alexander Gusev(Harvard University), Andrea Byrnes(Broad Institute), Steven Gazal(Harvard University), Po‐Ru Loh(Harvard University), Caleb A. Lareau(Broad Institute), Noam Shoresh(Broad Institute), Giulio Genovese(Broad Institute), Arpiar Saunders(Harvard University), Evan Z. Macosko(Harvard University), Samuela Pollack(Harvard University), John R. B. Perry(University of Cambridge), Jason D. Buenrostro(Broad Institute), B Bernstein(Broad Institute), Soumya Raychaudhuri(Broad Institute), Steven A. McCarroll(Broad Institute), Benjamin M. Neale(Broad Institute), Alkes L. Price(Broad Institute)
Nature Genetics
April 1, 2018
Cited by 1,207Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

We introduce an approach to identify disease-relevant tissues and cell types by analyzing gene expression data together with genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics. Our approach uses stratified linkage disequilibrium (LD) score regression to test whether disease heritability is enriched in regions surrounding genes with the highest specific expression in a given tissue. We applied our approach to gene expression data from several sources together with GWAS summary statistics for 48 diseases and traits (average N = 169,331) and found significant tissue-specific enrichments (false discovery rate (FDR) < 5%) for 34 traits. In our analysis of multiple tissues, we detected a broad range of enrichments that recapitulated known biology. In our brain-specific analysis, significant enrichments included an enrichment of inhibitory over excitatory neurons for bipolar disorder, and excitatory over inhibitory neurons for schizophrenia and body mass index. Our results demonstrate that our polygenic approach is a powerful way to leverage gene expression data for interpreting GWAS signals. A new method tests whether disease heritability is enriched near genes with high tissue-specific expression. The authors use gene expression data together with GWAS summary statistics for 48 diseases and traits to identify disease-relevant tissues.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis