home > bioproject > PRJNA79851
identifier PRJNA79851
type bioproject
sameAs
organism Homo sapiens
title RNA sequencing reveals the role of splicing polymorphisms in regulating human gene expression
description Expression levels of many human genes are under the genetic control of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs). Despite technological advances, the precise molecular mechanisms underlying most eQTLs remain elusive. Here, we use deep mRNA sequencing of two CEU individuals to investigate those mechanisms, with particular focus on the role of splicing control loci (sQTLs). We identify a large number of genes that are differentially spliced between the two samples and associate many of those differences with nearby SNPs. Subsequently, we investigate the potential effect of splicing SNPs on eQTL control in general. We find a significant enrichment of alternative splicing (AS) events within a set of highly confident eQTL targets discovered in previous studies, suggesting a role of AS in regulating overall gene expression levels. Next, we demonstrate high correlation between the levels of mature (exonic) and unprocessed (intronic) RNA, implying that ~75% of eQTL target variance can be explained by control at the level of transcription, but that the remaining 25% may be regulated co- or post-transcriptionally. We focus on eQTL targets with discordant mRNA and pre-mRNA expression patterns and use four examples: USMG5, MMAB, MRPL43 and OAS1, to dissect the exact downstream effects of the causative genetic variants.
data type Transcriptome or Gene expression
organization
publication
RNA sequencing reveals the role of splicing polymorphisms in regulating human gene expression.
properties 
{...}
dbXrefs
sra-run  SRR074943SRR074953SRR085452
sra-submission  SRA026779
biosample  SAMN00801912SAMN00801914
sra-study  SRP004725
sra-sample  SRS000091SRS000092
sra-experiment  SRX032607SRX032899
distribution JSONJSON-LD
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status public
visibility unrestricted-access
dateCreated 2011-12-20T00:00:00Z
dateModified 2011-12-20T00:00:00Z
datePublished