Complex nature of SNP genotype effects on gene expression in primary human leucocytes
Abstract
Background
Genome wide association studies have been hugely successful in identifying disease risk variants, yet most variants do not lead to coding changes and how variants influence biological function is usually unknown.
Methods
We correlated gene expression and genetic variation in untouched primary leucocytes (n = 110) from individuals with celiac disease – a common condition with multiple risk variants identified. We compared our observations with an EBV-transformed HapMap B cell line dataset (n = 90), and performed a meta-analysis to increase power to detect non-tissue specific effects.
Results
In celiac peripheral blood, 2,315 SNP variants influenced gene expression at 765 different transcripts (< 250 kb from SNP, at FDR = 0.05,
Conclusion
In conclusion, the complex nature of genotypic effects in human populations makes the use of a relevant tissue, large datasets, and analysis of different exons essential to enable the identification of the function for many genetic risk variants in common diseases.
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c2009complexbmc
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Authors | C, Dinesen Lotte;A, Swertz Morris;Marcel, Bruinenberg;C, Jansen Ritsert;Gosia, Trynka;A, Heap Graham;A, Hunt Karen;Cisca, Wijmenga;A, vanHeel David;Lude, Franke; |
Journal | bmc medical genomics |
Year | 2009 |
DOI | DOI not found |
URL | |
Keywords |
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