Abstract
AbstractHumans display sexual dimorphism across many traits, but little is known about underlying genetic mechanisms and impacts on disease. We utilized single-cell RNA-seq of 480 lymphoblastoid cell lines to reveal that the vast majority (79%) of sex-biased genes are targets of transcription factors that display sex-biased expression. Further, we developed a two-step regression method that identified sex-biased expression quantitative trait loci (sb-eQTL) across the genome. In contrast to previous work, these sb-eQTL are abundant (n=10,754; FDR 5%) and reproducible (replication up to π1=0.56). These sb-eQTL are enriched in over 600 GWAS phenotypes, including 120 sb-eQTL associated with the female-biased autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis. Our results demonstrate widespread genetic impacts on sexual dimorphism and identify possible mechanisms and clinical targets for sex differences in diverse diseases.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory