Genetics of gene expression and its effect on disease

V Emilsson, G Thorleifsson, B Zhang, AS Leonardson… - Nature, 2008 - nature.com
V Emilsson, G Thorleifsson, B Zhang, AS Leonardson, F Zink, J Zhu, S Carlson, A Helgason
Nature, 2008nature.com
Common human diseases result from the interplay of many genes and environmental
factors. Therefore, a more integrative biology approach is needed to unravel the complexity
and causes of such diseases. To elucidate the complexity of common human diseases such
as obesity, we have analysed the expression of 23,720 transcripts in large population-based
blood and adipose tissue cohorts comprehensively assessed for various phenotypes,
including traits related to clinical obesity. In contrast to the blood expression profiles, we …
Abstract
Common human diseases result from the interplay of many genes and environmental factors. Therefore, a more integrative biology approach is needed to unravel the complexity and causes of such diseases. To elucidate the complexity of common human diseases such as obesity, we have analysed the expression of 23,720 transcripts in large population-based blood and adipose tissue cohorts comprehensively assessed for various phenotypes, including traits related to clinical obesity. In contrast to the blood expression profiles, we observed a marked correlation between gene expression in adipose tissue and obesity-related traits. Genome-wide linkage and association mapping revealed a highly significant genetic component to gene expression traits, including a strong genetic effect of proximal (cis) signals, with 50% of the cis signals overlapping between the two tissues profiled. Here we demonstrate an extensive transcriptional network constructed from the human adipose data that exhibits significant overlap with similar network modules constructed from mouse adipose data. A core network module in humans and mice was identified that is enriched for genes involved in the inflammatory and immune response and has been found to be causally associated to obesity-related traits.
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