Person: Tukiainen, Taru
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Publication Distribution and Medical Impact of Loss-of-Function Variants in the Finnish Founder Population
(Public Library of Science, 2014) Lim, Elaine T.; Würtz, Peter; Havulinna, Aki S.; Palta, Priit; Tukiainen, Taru; Rehnström, Karola; Esko, Tõnu; Mägi, Reedik; Inouye, Michael; Lappalainen, Tuuli; Chan, Yingleong; Salem, Rany M.; Lek, Monkol; Flannick, Jason; Sim, Xueling; Manning, Alisa; Ladenvall, Claes; Bumpstead, Suzannah; Hämäläinen, Eija; Aalto, Kristiina; Maksimow, Mikael; Salmi, Marko; Blankenberg, Stefan; Ardissino, Diego; Shah, Svati; Horne, Benjamin; McPherson, Ruth; Hovingh, Gerald K.; Reilly, Muredach P.; Watkins, Hugh; Goel, Anuj; Farrall, Martin; Girelli, Domenico; Reiner, Alex P.; Stitziel, Nathan O.; Kathiresan, Sekar; Gabriel, Stacey; Barrett, Jeffrey C.; Lehtimäki, Terho; Laakso, Markku; Groop, Leif; Kaprio, Jaakko; Perola, Markus; McCarthy, Mark I.; Boehnke, Michael; Altshuler, David; Lindgren, Cecilia M.; Hirschhorn, Joel N.; Metspalu, Andres; Freimer, Nelson B.; Zeller, Tanja; Jalkanen, Sirpa; Koskinen, Seppo; Raitakari, Olli; Durbin, Richard; MacArthur, Daniel; Salomaa, Veikko; Ripatti, Samuli; Daly, Mark; Palotie, AarnoExome sequencing studies in complex diseases are challenged by the allelic heterogeneity, large number and modest effect sizes of associated variants on disease risk and the presence of large numbers of neutral variants, even in phenotypically relevant genes. Isolated populations with recent bottlenecks offer advantages for studying rare variants in complex diseases as they have deleterious variants that are present at higher frequencies as well as a substantial reduction in rare neutral variation. To explore the potential of the Finnish founder population for studying low-frequency (0.5–5%) variants in complex diseases, we compared exome sequence data on 3,000 Finns to the same number of non-Finnish Europeans and discovered that, despite having fewer variable sites overall, the average Finn has more low-frequency loss-of-function variants and complete gene knockouts. We then used several well-characterized Finnish population cohorts to study the phenotypic effects of 83 enriched loss-of-function variants across 60 phenotypes in 36,262 Finns. Using a deep set of quantitative traits collected on these cohorts, we show 5 associations (p<5×10−8) including splice variants in LPA that lowered plasma lipoprotein(a) levels (P = 1.5×10−117). Through accessing the national medical records of these participants, we evaluate the LPA finding via Mendelian randomization and confirm that these splice variants confer protection from cardiovascular disease (OR = 0.84, P = 3×10−4), demonstrating for the first time the correlation between very low levels of LPA in humans with potential therapeutic implications for cardiovascular diseases. More generally, this study articulates substantial advantages for studying the role of rare variation in complex phenotypes in founder populations like the Finns and by combining a unique population genetic history with data from large population cohorts and centralized research access to National Health Registers.
Publication Chromosome X-Wide Association Study Identifies Loci for Fasting Insulin and Height and Evidence for Incomplete Dosage Compensation
(Public Library of Science, 2014) Tukiainen, Taru; Pirinen, Matti; Sarin, Antti-Pekka; Ladenvall, Claes; Kettunen, Johannes; Lehtimäki, Terho; Lokki, Marja-Liisa; Perola, Markus; Sinisalo, Juha; Vlachopoulou, Efthymia; Eriksson, Johan G.; Groop, Leif; Jula, Antti; Järvelin, Marjo-Riitta; Raitakari, Olli T.; Salomaa, Veikko; Ripatti, SamuliThe X chromosome (chrX) represents one potential source for the “missing heritability” for complex phenotypes, which thus far has remained underanalyzed in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). Here we demonstrate the benefits of including chrX in GWAS by assessing the contribution of 404,862 chrX SNPs to levels of twelve commonly studied cardiometabolic and anthropometric traits in 19,697 Finnish and Swedish individuals with replication data on 5,032 additional Finns. By using a linear mixed model, we estimate that on average 2.6% of the additive genetic variance in these twelve traits is attributable to chrX, this being in proportion to the number of SNPs in the chromosome. In a chrX-wide association analysis, we identify three novel loci: two for height (rs182838724 near FGF16/ATRX/MAGT1, joint P-value = 2.71×10−9, and rs1751138 near ITM2A, P-value = 3.03×10−10) and one for fasting insulin (rs139163435 in Xq23, P-value = 5.18×10−9). Further, we find that effect sizes for variants near ITM2A, a gene implicated in cartilage development, show evidence for a lack of dosage compensation. This observation is further supported by a sex-difference in ITM2A expression in whole blood (P-value = 0.00251), and is also in agreement with a previous report showing ITM2A escapes from X chromosome inactivation (XCI) in the majority of women. Hence, our results show one of the first links between phenotypic variation in a population sample and an XCI-escaping locus and pinpoint ITM2A as a potential contributor to the sexual dimorphism in height. In conclusion, our study provides a clear motivation for including chrX in large-scale genetic studies of complex diseases and traits.
Publication Synchronized age-related gene expression changes across multiple tissues in human and the link to complex diseases
(Nature Publishing Group, 2015) Yang, Jialiang; Huang, Tao; Petralia, Francesca; Long, Quan; Zhang, Bin; Argmann, Carmen; Zhao, Yong; Mobbs, Charles V.; Schadt, Eric E.; Zhu, Jun; Tu, Zhidong; Ardlie, Kristin G.; Deluca, David S.; Segrè, Ayellet V.; Sullivan, Timothy J.; Young, Taylor R.; Gelfand, Ellen T.; Trowbridge, Casandra A.; Maller, Julian B.; Tukiainen, Taru; Lek, Monkol; Ward, Lucas D.; Kheradpour, Pouya; Iriarte, Benjamin; Meng, Yan; Palmer, Cameron D.; Winckler, Wendy; Hirschhorn, Joel; Kellis, Manolis; MacArthur, Daniel; Getz, Gad; Shablin, Andrey A.; Li, Gen; Zhou, Yi-Hui; Nobel, Andrew B.; Rusyn, Ivan; Wright, Fred A.; Lappalainen, Tuuli; Ferreira, Pedro G.; Ongen, Halit; Rivas, Manuel A.; Battle, Alexis; Mostafavi, Sara; Monlong, Jean; Sammeth, Michael; Mele, Marta; Reverter, Ferran; Goldman, Jakob; Koller, Daphne; Guigo, Roderic; McCarthy, Mark I.; Dermitzakis, Emmanouil T.; Gamazon, Eric R.; Konkashbaev, Anuar; Nicolae, Dan L.; Cox, Nancy J.; Flutre, Timothée; Wen, Xiaoquan; Stephens, Matthew; Pritchard, Jonathan K.; Lin, Luan; Liu, Jun; Brown, Amanda; Mestichelli, Bernadette; Tidwell, Denee; Lo, Edmund; Salvatore, Mike; Shad, Saboor; Thomas, Jeffrey A.; Lonsdale, John T.; Choi, Christopher; Karasik, Ellen; Ramsey, Kimberly; Moser, Michael T.; Foster, Barbara A.; Gillard, Bryan M.; Syron, John; Fleming, Johnelle; Magazine, Harold; Hasz, Rick; Walters, Gary D.; Bridge, Jason P.; Miklos, Mark; Sullivan, Susan; Barker, Laura K.; Traino, Heather; Mosavel, Magboeba; Siminoff, Laura A.; Valley, Dana R.; Rohrer, Daniel C.; Jewel, Scott; Branton, Philip; Sobin, Leslie H.; Qi, Liqun; Hariharan, Pushpa; Wu, Shenpei; Tabor, David; Shive, Charles; Smith, Anna M.; Buia, Stephen A.; Undale, Anita H.; Robinson, Karna L.; Roche, Nancy; Valentino, Kimberly M.; Britton, Angela; Burges, Robin; Bradbury, Debra; Hambright, Kenneth W.; Seleski, John; Korzeniewski, Greg E.; Erickson, Kenyon; Marcus, Yvonne; Tejada, Jorge; Taherian, Mehran; Lu, Chunrong; Robles, Barnaby E.; Basile, Margaret; Mash, Deborah C.; Volpi, Simona; Struewing, Jeff; Temple, Gary F.; Boyer, Joy; Colantuoni, Deborah; Little, Roger; Koester, Susan; Carithers, NCI Latarsha J.; Moore, Helen M.; Guan, Ping; Compton, Carolyn; Sawyer, Sherilyn J.; Demchok, Joanne P.; Vaught, Jimmie B.; Rabiner, Chana A.; Lockhart, Nicole C.Aging is one of the most important biological processes and is a known risk factor for many age-related diseases in human. Studying age-related transcriptomic changes in tissues across the whole body can provide valuable information for a holistic understanding of this fundamental process. In this work, we catalogue age-related gene expression changes in nine tissues from nearly two hundred individuals collected by the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project. In general, we find the aging gene expression signatures are very tissue specific. However, enrichment for some well-known aging components such as mitochondria biology is observed in many tissues. Different levels of cross-tissue synchronization of age-related gene expression changes are observed, and some essential tissues (e.g., heart and lung) show much stronger “co-aging” than other tissues based on a principal component analysis. The aging gene signatures and complex disease genes show a complex overlapping pattern and only in some cases, we see that they are significantly overlapped in the tissues affected by the corresponding diseases. In summary, our analyses provide novel insights to the co-regulation of age-related gene expression in multiple tissues; it also presents a tissue-specific view of the link between aging and age-related diseases.