Single-cell eQTL analysis of activated T cell subsets reveals activation and cell type–dependent effects of disease-risk variants

Author:

Schmiedel Benjamin J.1ORCID,Gonzalez-Colin Cristian12,Fajardo Vicente1ORCID,Rocha Job12,Madrigal Ariel1,Ramírez-Suástegui Ciro1ORCID,Bhattacharyya Sourya1,Simon Hayley1ORCID,Greenbaum Jason A.1ORCID,Peters Bjoern1ORCID,Seumois Grégory1ORCID,Ay Ferhat13ORCID,Chandra Vivek1ORCID,Vijayanand Pandurangan145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. La Jolla Institute for Immunology, La Jolla, CA, USA.

2. Center for Genomic Sciences, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.

3. Department of Pediatrics, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.

4. Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.

5. Liverpool Head and Neck Centre, Institute of Systems, Molecular and Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.

Abstract

The impact of genetic variants on cells challenged in biologically relevant contexts has not been fully explored. Here, we activated CD4 + T cells from 89 healthy donors and performed a single-cell RNA sequencing assay with >1 million cells to examine cell type–specific and activation-dependent effects of genetic variants. Single-cell expression quantitative trait loci (sc-eQTL) analysis of 19 distinct CD4 + T cell subsets showed that the expression of over 4000 genes is significantly associated with common genetic polymorphisms and that most of these genes show their most prominent effects in specific cell types. These genes included many that encode for molecules important for activation, differentiation, and effector functions of T cells. We also found new gene associations for disease-risk variants identified from genome-wide association studies and highlighted the cell types in which their effects are most prominent. We found that biological sex has a major influence on activation-dependent gene expression in CD4 + T cell subsets. Sex-biased transcripts were significantly enriched in several pathways that are essential for the initiation and execution of effector functions by CD4 + T cells like TCR signaling, cytokines, cytokine receptors, costimulatory, apoptosis, and cell-cell adhesion pathways. Overall, this DICE (Database of Immune Cell Expression, eQTLs, and Epigenomics) subproject highlights the power of sc-eQTL studies for simultaneously exploring the activation and cell type–dependent effects of common genetic variants on gene expression ( https://dice-database.org ).

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

General Medicine,Immunology

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