孟德尔随机化
计算生物学
生物
疾病
蛋白质组
生物标志物
人类蛋白质组计划
生物标志物发现
基因
药物发现
医学
遗传学
生物信息学
蛋白质组学
遗传变异
内科学
基因型
作者
Lasse Folkersen,Stefan Gustafsson,Qin Wang,Daniel Hvidberg Hansen,Åsa K. Hedman,Andrew J. Schork,Karen Page,Daria V. Zhernakova,Yang Wu,James E. Peters,Niclas Eriksson,Sarah E. Bergen,Thibaud Boutin,Andrew D. Bretherick,Stefan Enroth,Anette Kalnapenkis,Jesper R. Gådin,Bianca E Suur,Yan Chen,Ljubica Matic
出处
期刊:Nature metabolism
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2020-10-16
卷期号:2 (10): 1135-1148
被引量:541
标识
DOI:10.1038/s42255-020-00287-2
摘要
Circulating proteins are vital in human health and disease and are frequently used as biomarkers for clinical decision-making or as targets for pharmacological intervention. Here, we map and replicate protein quantitative trait loci (pQTL) for 90 cardiovascular proteins in over 30,000 individuals, resulting in 451 pQTLs for 85 proteins. For each protein, we further perform pathway mapping to obtain trans-pQTL gene and regulatory designations. We substantiate these regulatory findings with orthogonal evidence for trans-pQTLs using mouse knockdown experiments (ABCA1 and TRIB1) and clinical trial results (chemokine receptors CCR2 and CCR5), with consistent regulation. Finally, we evaluate known drug targets, and suggest new target candidates or repositioning opportunities using Mendelian randomization. This identifies 11 proteins with causal evidence of involvement in human disease that have not previously been targeted, including EGF, IL-16, PAPPA, SPON1, F3, ADM, CASP-8, CHI3L1, CXCL16, GDF15 and MMP-12. Taken together, these findings demonstrate the utility of large-scale mapping of the genetics of the proteome and provide a resource for future precision studies of circulating proteins in human health. Folkersen et al. report the first results from the SCALLOP consortium, a collaborative framework for pQTL mapping and biomarker analysis of proteins on the Olink platform. A total of 315 primary and 136 secondary pQTLs for 85 circulating cardiovascular proteins from over 30,000 individuals were identified and replicated to yield new insights for translational studies and drug development.
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