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A multi-tissue transcriptome analysis of human metabolites guides interpretability of associations based on multi-SNP models for gene expression

Abstract:
There is particular interest in transcriptome-wide association studies (TWAS) - gene-level tests based on multi-SNP predictive models of gene expression - for identifying causal genes at loci associated with complex traits. However, interpretation of TWAS associations may be complicated by divergent effects of model SNPs on phenotype and gene expression. We developed an iterative modelling scheme for obtaining multi-SNP models of gene expression and applied this framework to generate expression models for 43 human tissues from the Genotype-Tissues Expression (GTEx) Project. We characterized the performance of single- and multi-SNP models for identifying causal genes in GWAS data for 46 circulating metabolites. We show that: (a) multi-SNP models captured more variation in expression than the top cis-eQTL (median 2-fold improvement); (b) predicted expression based on multi-SNP models was associated (FDR<0.01) with metabolite levels for 826 unique gene-metabolite pairs, but, after step-wise conditional analyses, 90% were dominated by a single eQTL SNP; (c) amongst the 35% of associations where a SNP in the expression model was a significant cis-eQTL and metabolomic-QTL (met-QTL), 92% demonstrated colocalization between these signals, but interpretation was often complicated by incomplete overlap of QTLs in multi-SNP models; (d) using a “truth” set of causal genes at 61 met-QTLs, the sensitivity was high (67%), but the positive predictive value was low, as only 8% of TWAS associations (19% when restricted to colocalized associations at met-QTLs) involved true causal genes. These results guide the interpretation of TWAS and highlight the need for corroborative data to provide confident assignment of causality.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.ajhg.2020.01.003

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
NDM
Sub department:
Human Genetics Wt Centre
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Elsevier
Journal:
American Journal of Human Genetics More from this journal
Volume:
106
Issue:
2
Pages:
188-201
Publication date:
2020-01-23
Acceptance date:
2020-01-07
DOI:
EISSN:
1537-6605
ISSN:
0002-9297


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:1081628
UUID:
uuid:d17e197f-c5b7-4621-a4c9-af3157218527
Local pid:
pubs:1081628
Source identifiers:
1081628
Deposit date:
2020-01-10

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