Quantitative trait locus (xQTL) approaches identify risk genes and drug targets from human non-coding genomes

Author:

Bykova Marina1,Hou Yuan1,Eng Charis12,Cheng Feixiong12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Genomic Medicine Institute, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic , Cleveland, OH 44195 , USA

2. Department of Molecular Medicine, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University , Cleveland, OH 44195 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Advances and reduction of costs in various sequencing technologies allow for a closer look at variations present in the non-coding regions of the human genome. Correlating non-coding variants with large-scale multi-omic data holds the promise not only of a better understanding of likely causal connections between non-coding DNA and expression of traits but also identifying potential disease-modifying medicines. Genome–phenome association studies have created large datasets of DNA variants that are associated with multiple traits or diseases, such as Alzheimer’s disease; yet, the functional consequences of variants, in particular of non-coding variants, remain largely unknown. Recent advances in functional genomics and computational approaches have led to the identification of potential roles of DNA variants, such as various quantitative trait locus (xQTL) techniques. Multi-omic assays and analytic approaches toward xQTL have identified links between genetic loci and human transcriptomic, epigenomic, proteomic and metabolomic data. In this review, we first discuss the recent development of xQTL from multi-omic findings. We then highlight multimodal analysis of xQTL and genetic data for identification of risk genes and drug targets using Alzheimer’s disease as an example. We finally discuss challenges and future research directions (e.g. artificial intelligence) for annotation of non-coding variants in complex diseases.

Funder

National Institute of Aging

National Institutes of Health

Hardis Endowed Chair of Cancer Genomic Medicine

Cleveland Clinic

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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