Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Statistically and functionally fine-mapped blood eQTLs and pQTLs from 1,405 humans reveal distinct regulation patterns and disease relevance

Qingbo S. Wang, Takanori Hasegawa, Ho Namkoong, Ryunosuke Saiki, Ryuya Edahiro, Kyuto Sonehara, Hiromu Tanaka, Shuhei Azekawa, Shotaro Chubachi, Yugo Takahashi, Saori Sakaue, Shinichi Namba, Kenichi Yamamoto, Yuichi Shiraishi, Kenichi Chiba, Hiroko Tanaka, Hideki Makishima, Yasuhito Nannya, Zicong Zhang, Rika Tsujikawa, Ryuji Koike, Tomomi Takano, Makoto Ishii, Akinori Kimura, Fumitaka Inoue, Takanori Kanai∥, Koichi Fukunaga, Seishi Ogawa, Seiya Imoto, Satoru Miyano, Yukinori Okada, Japan COVID-19 Task Force

Nature Genetics · 2024

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Summary

Studying the genetic regulation of protein expression (through protein quantitative trait loci (pQTLs)) offers a deeper understanding of regulatory variants uncharacterized by mRNA expression regulation (expression QTLs (eQTLs)) studies. Here we report cis-eQTL and cis-pQTL statistical fine-mapping from 1,405 genotyped samples with blood mRNA and 2,932 plasma samples of protein expression, as part of the Japan COVID-19 Task Force (JCTF). Fine-mapped eQTLs (n = 3,464) were enriched for 932 variants validated with a massively parallel reporter assay. Fine-mapped pQTLs (n = 582) were enriched for missense variations on structured and extracellular domains, although the possibility of epitope-binding artifacts remains. Trans-eQTL and trans-pQTL analysis highlighted associations of class I HLA

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41588-024-01896-3
Catalogue ID
SNmoj1y2x7-9i9mm5
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