Age, Sex, and Genetic Architecture of Human Gene Expression in EBV Transformed Cell Lines
Abstract
Individual expression profiles from EBV transformed cell lines are an emerging resource for genomic investigation. In this study we characterize the effects of age, sex, and genetic variation on gene expression by surveying public datasets of such profiles. We establish that the expression space of cell lines maintains genetic as well as non-germline information, in an individual-specific and cross-tissue manner. Age of donor is associated with the expression of 949 genes in the derived cell line. Age-associated genes include over-representation of immune-related genes, specifically MHC Class I genes, a phenomenon that replicates across tissues and organisms. Sex associated genes in these cell lines include likely candidates, such as genes that escape X-inactivation,testis specific expressed genes, androgen and estrogen specific genes, but also gene families previously unknown to be sex associated such as common microRNA targets (MIR-490, VARP101, MIR-489). Finally, we report 494 transcripts whose expression levels are associated with a genetic variant in cis, overlapping and validating previous reports. Incorporating age in analysis of association facilitates additional discovery of trans-acting regulatory genetic variants. Our findings promote expression profiling of transformed cell lines as a vehicle for understanding cellular systems beyond the specific lines.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.