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The genetic regulation of transcription in human endometrial tissue

Authors :
Jenny N. Fung
Joseph E. Powell
Sarah J Holdsworth-Carson
Yadav Sapkota
Anjali K. Henders
Martin Healey
Jane E. Girling
Grant W. Montgomery
Samuel W. Lukowski
Peter Rogers
Leanne Wallace
Source :
Human reproduction (Oxford, England). 32(4)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Do genetic effects regulate gene expression in human endometrium?This study demonstrated strong genetic effects on endometrial gene expression and some evidence for genetic regulation of gene expression in a menstrual cycle stage-specific manner.Genetic effects on expression levels for many genes are tissue specific. Endometrial gene expression varies across menstrual cycle stages and between individuals, but there are limited data on genetic control of expression in endometrium.We analysed genome-wide genotype and gene expression data to map cis expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) in endometrium.We recruited 123 women of European ancestry. DNA samples from blood were genotyped on Illumina HumanCoreExome chips. Total RNA was extracted from endometrial tissues. Whole-transcriptome profiles were characterized using Illumina Human HT-12 v4.0 Expression Beadchips. We performed eQTL mapping with ~8 000 000 genotyped and imputed single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and 12 329 genes.We identified a total of 18 595 cis SNP-probe associations at a study-wide level of significance (P1 × 10-7), which correspond to independent eQTLs for 198 unique genes. The eQTLs with the largest effect in endometrial tissue were rs4902335 for CHURC1 (P = 1.05 × 10-32) and rs147253019 for ZP3 (P = 8.22 × 10-30). We further performed a context-specific eQTL analysis to investigate if genetic effects on gene expression regulation act in a menstrual cycle-specific manner. Interestingly, five cis-eQTLs were identified with a significant stage-by-genotype interaction. The strongest stage interaction was the eQTL for C10ORF33 (PYROXD2) with SNP rs2296438 (P = 2.0 × 10-4), where we observe a 2-fold difference in the average expression levels of heterozygous samples depending on the stage of the menstrual cycle.The summary eQTL results are publicly available to browse or download.A limitation of the present study was the relatively modest sample size. It was not powered to identify trans-eQTLs and larger sample sizes will also be needed to provide better power to detect cis-eQTLs and cycle stage-specific effects, given the substantial changes in expression across the menstrual cycle for many genes.Identification of endometrial eQTLs provides a platform for better understanding genetic effects on endometriosis risk and other endometrial-related pathologies.Funding for this work was provided by NHMRC Project Grants GNT1026033, GNT1049472, GNT1046880, GNT1050208, GNT1105321 and APP1083405. There are no competing interests.

Details

ISSN :
14602350
Volume :
32
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human reproduction (Oxford, England)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e6467eff9f9986d2a57648cc5257bc8c