Author:
Cenik Can,Cenik Elif Sarinay,Byeon Gun W.,Grubert Fabian,Candille Sophie I.,Spacek Damek,Alsallakh Bilal,Tilgner Hagen,Araya Carlos L.,Tang Hua,Ricci Emiliano,Snyder Michael P.
Abstract
Elucidating the consequences of genetic differences between humans is essential for understanding phenotypic diversity and personalized medicine. Although variation in RNA levels, transcription factor binding, and chromatin have been explored, little is known about global variation in translation and its genetic determinants. We used ribosome profiling, RNA sequencing, and mass spectrometry to perform an integrated analysis in lymphoblastoid cell lines from a diverse group of individuals. We find significant differences in RNA, translation, and protein levels suggesting diverse mechanisms of personalized gene expression control. Combined analysis of RNA expression and ribosome occupancy improves the identification of individual protein level differences. Finally, we identify genetic differences that specifically modulate ribosome occupancy—many of these differences lie close to start codons and upstream ORFs. Our results reveal a new level of gene expression variation among humans and indicate that genetic variants can cause changes in protein levels through effects on translation.
Funder
Child Health Research Institute
Benchmark Stanford Graduate
Stanford Transformative and Innovation grant
National Institutes of Health
National Human Genome Research Institute
NIH
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Genetics(clinical),Genetics
Cited by
166 articles.
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