Browsing by Subject "Genetic Pleiotropy"
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Item Open Access An Atlas of Genetic Variation Linking Pathogen-Induced Cellular Traits to Human Disease.(Cell host & microbe, 2018-08) Wang, Liuyang; Pittman, Kelly J; Barker, Jeffrey R; Salinas, Raul E; Stanaway, Ian B; Williams, Graham D; Carroll, Robert J; Balmat, Tom; Ingham, Andy; Gopalakrishnan, Anusha M; Gibbs, Kyle D; Antonia, Alejandro L; eMERGE Network; Heitman, Joseph; Lee, Soo Chan; Jarvik, Gail P; Denny, Joshua C; Horner, Stacy M; DeLong, Mark R; Valdivia, Raphael H; Crosslin, David R; Ko, Dennis CPathogens have been a strong driving force for natural selection. Therefore, understanding how human genetic differences impact infection-related cellular traits can mechanistically link genetic variation to disease susceptibility. Here we report the Hi-HOST Phenome Project (H2P2): a catalog of cellular genome-wide association studies (GWAS) comprising 79 infection-related phenotypes in response to 8 pathogens in 528 lymphoblastoid cell lines. Seventeen loci surpass genome-wide significance for infection-associated phenotypes ranging from pathogen replication to cytokine production. We combined H2P2 with clinical association data from patients to identify a SNP near CXCL10 as a risk factor for inflammatory bowel disease. A SNP in the transcriptional repressor ZBTB20 demonstrated pleiotropy, likely through suppression of multiple target genes, and was associated with viral hepatitis. These data are available on a web portal to facilitate interpreting human genome variation through the lens of cell biology and should serve as a rich resource for the research community.Item Open Access CPAG: software for leveraging pleiotropy in GWAS to reveal similarity between human traits links plasma fatty acids and intestinal inflammation.(Genome Biol, 2015-09-15) Wang, L; Oehlers, SH; Espenschied, ST; Rawls, JF; Tobin, DM; Ko, DCMeta-analyses of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have demonstrated that the same genetic variants can be associated with multiple diseases and other complex traits. We present software called CPAG (Cross-Phenotype Analysis of GWAS) to look for similarities between 700 traits, build trees with informative clusters, and highlight underlying pathways. Clusters are consistent with pre-defined groups and literature-based validation but also reveal novel connections. We report similarity between plasma palmitoleic acid and Crohn's disease and find that specific fatty acids exacerbate enterocolitis in zebrafish. CPAG will become increasingly powerful as more genetic variants are uncovered, leading to a deeper understanding of complex traits. CPAG is freely available at www.sourceforge.net/projects/CPAG/.