Effect sizes of causal variants for gene expression and complex traits differ between populations

Author:

Patel Roshni A.,Musharoff Shaila A.,Spence Jeffrey P.,Pimentel Harold,Tcheandjieu Catherine,Mostafavi Hakhamanesh,Sinnott-Armstrong NasaORCID,Clarke Shoa L.,Smith Courtney J.ORCID,Durda Peter P.,Taylor Kent D.,Tracy Russell,Liu Yongmei,Johnson Craig W.,Aguet Francois,Ardlie Kristin G.,Gabriel Stacey,Smith Josh,Nickerson Deborah A.ORCID,Rich Stephen S.,Rotter Jerome I.,Tsao Philip S.,Assimes Themistocles L.ORCID,Pritchard Jonathan K.,

Abstract

AbstractDespite the growing number of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for complex traits, it remains unclear whether effect sizes of causal genetic variants differ between populations. In principle, effect sizes of causal variants could differ between populations due to gene-by-gene or gene-by-environment interactions. However, comparing causal variant effect sizes is challenging: it is difficult to know which variants are causal, and comparisons of variant effect sizes are confounded by differences in linkage disequilibrium (LD) structure between ancestries. Here, we develop a method to assess causal variant effect size differences that overcomes these limitations. Specifically, we leverage the fact that segments of European ancestry shared between European-American and admixed African-American individuals have similar LD structure, allowing for unbiased comparisons of variant effect sizes in European ancestry segments. We apply our method to two types of traits: gene expression and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C). We find that causal variant effect sizes for gene expression are significantly different between European-Americans and African-Americans; for LDL-C, we observe a similar point estimate although this is not significant, likely due to lower statistical power. Cross-population differences in variant effect sizes highlight the role of genetic interactions in trait architecture and will contribute to the poor portability of polygenic scores across populations, reinforcing the importance of conducting GWAS on individuals of diverse ancestries and environments.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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