TY - JOUR
T1 - Tissue-specific and tissue-agnostic effects of genome sequence variation modulating blood pressure
AU - Lee, Dongwon
AU - Han, Seong Kyu
AU - Yaacov, Or
AU - Berk-Rauch, Hanna
AU - Mathiyalagan, Prabhu
AU - Ganesh, Santhi K.
AU - Chakravarti, Aravinda
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023
PY - 2023/11/28
Y1 - 2023/11/28
N2 - Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified numerous variants associated with polygenic traits and diseases. However, with few exceptions, a mechanistic understanding of which variants affect which genes in which tissues to modulate trait variation is lacking. Here, we present genomic analyses to explain trait heritability of blood pressure (BP) through the genetics of transcriptional regulation using GWASs, multiomics data from different tissues, and machine learning approaches. Approximately 500,000 predicted regulatory variants across four tissues explain 33.4% of variant heritability: 2.5%, 5.3%, 7.7%, and 11.8% for kidney-, adrenal-, heart-, and artery-specific variants, respectively. Variation in the enhancers involved shows greater tissue specificity than in the genes they regulate, suggesting that gene regulatory networks perturbed by enhancer variants in a tissue relevant to a phenotype are the major source of interindividual variation in BP. Thus, our study provides an approach to scan human tissue and cell types for their physiological contribution to any trait.
AB - Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified numerous variants associated with polygenic traits and diseases. However, with few exceptions, a mechanistic understanding of which variants affect which genes in which tissues to modulate trait variation is lacking. Here, we present genomic analyses to explain trait heritability of blood pressure (BP) through the genetics of transcriptional regulation using GWASs, multiomics data from different tissues, and machine learning approaches. Approximately 500,000 predicted regulatory variants across four tissues explain 33.4% of variant heritability: 2.5%, 5.3%, 7.7%, and 11.8% for kidney-, adrenal-, heart-, and artery-specific variants, respectively. Variation in the enhancers involved shows greater tissue specificity than in the genes they regulate, suggesting that gene regulatory networks perturbed by enhancer variants in a tissue relevant to a phenotype are the major source of interindividual variation in BP. Thus, our study provides an approach to scan human tissue and cell types for their physiological contribution to any trait.
KW - CP: Genomics
KW - blood pressure
KW - complex traits
KW - heritability
KW - regulatory variants
KW - transcriptional machinery
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85175525685
U2 - 10.1016/j.celrep.2023.113351
DO - 10.1016/j.celrep.2023.113351
M3 - Article
C2 - 37910504
AN - SCOPUS:85175525685
SN - 2211-1247
VL - 42
JO - Cell Reports
JF - Cell Reports
IS - 11
M1 - 113351
ER -