A statistical framework for cross-tissue transcriptome-wide association analysis

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Abstract

Transcriptome-wide association analysis is a powerful approach to studying the genetic architecture of complex traits. A key component of this approach is to build a model to impute gene expression levels from genotypes by using samples with matched genotypes and gene expression data in a given tissue. However, it is challenging to develop robust and accurate imputation models with a limited sample size for any single tissue. Here, we first introduce a multi-task learning method to jointly impute gene expression in 44 human tissues. Compared with single-tissue methods, our approach achieved an average of 39% improvement in imputation accuracy and generated effective imputation models for an average of 120% more genes. We describe a summary-statistic-based testing framework that combines multiple single-tissue associations into a powerful metric to quantify the overall gene–trait association. We applied our method, called UTMOST (unified test for molecular signatures), to multiple genome-wide-association results and demonstrate its advantages over single-tissue strategies.

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Hu, Y., Li, M., Lu, Q., Weng, H., Wang, J., Zekavat, S. M., … Zhao, H. (2019). A statistical framework for cross-tissue transcriptome-wide association analysis. Nature Genetics, 51(3), 568–576. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-019-0345-7

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