Detection, Validation, and Downstream Analysis of Allelic Variation in Gene Expression

Author:

Ciobanu Daniel C12,Lu Lu1,Mozhui Khyobeni1,Wang Xusheng1,Jagalur Manjunatha3,Morris John A4,Taylor William L5,Dietz Klaus6,Simon Perikles7,Williams Robert W1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee 38163

2. Department of Animal Science, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 68583

3. Department of Computer Science, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003

4. Allen Institute for Brain Science, Seattle, Washington 98103

5. Molecular Resource Center, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee 38163

6. Department of Medical Biometry, University of Tuebingen, 72070 Tuebingen, Germany and

7. Department of Sports Medicine, Rehabilitation and Disease Prevention, Johannes Gutenberg–University Mainz, 55099 Mainz, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Common sequence variants within a gene often generate important differences in expression of corresponding mRNAs. This high level of local (allelic) control—or cis modulation—rivals that produced by gene targeting, but expression is titrated finely over a range of levels. We are interested in exploiting this allelic variation to study gene function and downstream consequences of differences in expression dosage. We have used several bioinformatics and molecular approaches to estimate error rates in the discovery of cis modulation and to analyze some of the biological and technical confounds that contribute to the variation in gene expression profiling. Our analysis of SNPs and alternative transcripts, combined with eQTL maps and selective gene resequencing, revealed that between 17 and 25% of apparent cis modulation is caused by SNPs that overlap probes rather than by genuine quantitative differences in mRNA levels. This estimate climbs to 40–50% when qualitative differences between isoform variants are included. We have developed an analytical approach to filter differences in expression and improve the yield of genuine cis-modulated transcripts to ∼80%. This improvement is important because the resulting variation can be successfully used to study downstream consequences of altered expression on higher-order phenotypes. Using a systems genetics approach we show that two validated cis-modulated genes, Stk25 and Rasd2, are likely to control expression of downstream targets and affect disease susceptibility.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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