Transcriptomics and chromatin accessibility in multiple African population samples

Author:

DeGorter Marianne KORCID,Goddard Page CORCID,Karakoc EmreORCID,Kundu SoumyaORCID,Yan Stephanie MORCID,Nachun DanielORCID,Abell NathanORCID,Aguirre MatthewORCID,Carstensen TommyORCID,Chen ZiweiORCID,Durrant MatthewORCID,Dwaracherla Vikranth R,Feng KarenORCID,Gloudemans Michael JORCID,Hunter NaiomiORCID,Moorthy Mohana P S,Pomilla CristinaORCID,Rodrigues Kameron BORCID,Smith Courtney J,Smith Kevin SORCID,Ungar Rachel AORCID,Balliu BrunildaORCID,Fellay JacquesORCID,Flicek PaulORCID,McLaren Paul JORCID,Henn BrennaORCID,McCoy Rajiv CORCID,Sugden LaurenORCID,Kundaje AnshulORCID,Sandhu Manjinder S,Gurdasani DeeptiORCID,Montgomery Stephen BORCID

Abstract

AbstractMapping the functional human genome and impact of genetic variants is often limited to European-descendent population samples. To aid in overcoming this limitation, we measured gene expression using RNA sequencing in lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) from 599 individuals from six African populations to identify novel transcripts including those not represented in the hg38 reference genome. We used whole genomes from the 1000 Genomes Project and 164 Maasai individuals to identify 8,881 expression and 6,949 splicing quantitative trait loci (eQTLs/sQTLs), and 2,611 structural variants associated with gene expression (SV-eQTLs). We further profiled chromatin accessibility using ATAC-Seq in a subset of 100 representative individuals, to identity chromatin accessibility quantitative trait loci (caQTLs) and allele-specific chromatin accessibility, and provide predictions for the functional effect of 78.9 million variants on chromatin accessibility. Using this map of eQTLs and caQTLs we fine-mapped GWAS signals for a range of complex diseases. Combined, this work expands global functional genomic data to identify novel transcripts, functional elements and variants, understand population genetic history of molecular quantitative trait loci, and further resolve the genetic basis of multiple human traits and disease.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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