Author:
Everett Logan J.,Huang Wen,Zhou Shanshan,Carbone Mary Anna,Lyman Richard F.,Arya Gunjan H.,Geisz Matthew S.,Ma Junwu,Morgante Fabio,St. Armour Genevieve,Turlapati Lavanya,Anholt Robert R.H.,Mackay Trudy F.C.
Abstract
A major challenge in modern biology is to understand how naturally occurring variation in DNA sequences affects complex organismal traits through networks of intermediate molecular phenotypes. This question is best addressed in a genetic mapping population in which all molecular polymorphisms are known and for which molecular endophenotypes and complex traits are assessed on the same genotypes. Here, we performed deep RNA sequencing of 200 Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel inbred lines with complete genome sequences and for which phenotypes of many quantitative traits have been evaluated. We mapped expression quantitative trait loci for annotated genes, novel transcribed regions, transposable elements, and microbial species. We identified host variants that affect expression of transposable elements, independent of their copy number, as well as microbiome composition. We constructed sex-specific expression quantitative trait locus regulatory networks. These networks are enriched for novel transcribed regions and target genes in heterochromatin and euchromatic regions of reduced recombination, as well as genes regulating transposable element expression. This study provides new insights regarding the role of natural genetic variation in regulating gene expression and generates testable hypotheses for future functional analyses.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
Cited by
61 articles.
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