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Genetic determinants of chromatin reveal prostate cancer risk mediated by context-dependent gene regulation.

Sylvan C Baca ,
Cassandra Singler ,
Soumya Zacharia ,
Ji-Heui Seo ,
Tunc Morova ,
Faraz Hach ,
Yi Ding ,
Tommer Schwarz ,
Chia-Chi Flora Huang ,
Jacob Anderson ,
André P Fay ,
Cynthia Kalita ,
Stefan Groha ,
Mark M Pomerantz ,
Victoria Wang ,
Simon Linder ,
Christopher J Sweeney ,
Wilbert Zwart ,
Nathan A Lack ,
Bogdan Pasaniuc ,
David Y Takeda ,
Alexander Gusev ,
Matthew L Freedman

Abstract

Many genetic variants affect disease risk by altering context-dependent gene regulation. Such variants are difficult to study mechanistically using current methods that link genetic variation to steady-state gene expression levels, such as expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs). To address this challenge, we developed the cistrome-wide association study (CWAS), a framework for identifying genotypic and allele-specific effects on chromatin that are also associated with disease. In prostate cancer, CWAS identified regulatory elements and androgen receptor-binding sites that explained the association at 52 of 98 known prostate cancer risk loci and discovered 17 additional risk loci. CWAS implicated key developmental transcription factors in prostate cancer risk that are overlooked by eQTL-based approaches due to context-dependent gene regulation. We experimentally validated associations and demonstrated the extensibility of CWAS to additional epigenomic datasets and phenotypes, including response to prostate cancer treatment. CWAS is a powerful and biologically interpretable paradigm for studying variants that influence traits by affecting transcriptional regulation.

More about this publication

Nature genetics

Volume 54
Issue nr. 9
Pages 1364-1375
Publication date 01-09-2022

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/s41588-022-01168-y
Europe PubMed Central 36071171
Pubmed 36071171

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