NCJ Number
249961
Journal
Nature Genetics Volume: 48 Issue: 1 Dated: January 2016 Pages: 22-29
Date Published
January 2016
Length
8 pages
Annotation
Since the contribution of repetitive elements to quantitative human traits is largely unknown, this article reports on a genome-wide survey of the contribution of short tandem repeats (STRs), which constitute one of the most polymorphic and abundant repeat classes, to gene expression in humans.
Abstract
The survey identified 2,060 significant expression STRs (eSTRs). These eSTRs were replicable in orthogonal populations and expression assays. Variance partitioning was used to disentangle the contribution of eSTRs from that of linked SNPs and indels and found that eSTRs contribute 10-15 percent of the cis heritability mediated by all common variants. Further functional genomic analyses showed that eSTRs are enriched in conserved regions, colocalize with regulatory elements, and may modulate certain histone modifications. By analyzing known genome-wide association study (GWAS) signals and searching for new associations in 1,685 whole genomes from deeply phenotyped individuals, the study found that eSTRs are enriched in various clinically relevant conditions. These results highlight the contribution of STRs to the genetic architecture of quantitative human traits. 17 figures and 78 references (Publisher abstract modified)
Date Published: January 1, 2016
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Determining the Precision of High-Throughput Sequencing and Its Influence on Aptamer Selection
- Forensic Footwear: A Retrospective of the Development of the MANTIS Shoe Scanning System
- Large-scale Selection of Highly Informative Microhaplotypes for Ancestry Inference and Population Specific Informativeness