Communications Biology (Mar 2024)

Omics-based construction of regulatory variants can be applied to help decipher pig liver-related traits

  • Ziqi Ling,
  • Jing Li,
  • Tao Jiang,
  • Zhen Zhang,
  • Yaling Zhu,
  • Zhimin Zhou,
  • Jiawen Yang,
  • Xinkai Tong,
  • Bin Yang,
  • Lusheng Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06050-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Genetic variants can influence complex traits by altering gene expression through changes to regulatory elements. However, the genetic variants that affect the activity of regulatory elements in pigs are largely unknown, and the extent to which these variants influence gene expression and contribute to the understanding of complex phenotypes remains unclear. Here, we annotate 90,991 high-quality regulatory elements using acetylation of histone H3 on lysine 27 (H3K27ac) ChIP-seq of 292 pig livers. Combined with genome resequencing and RNA-seq data, we identify 28,425 H3K27ac quantitative trait loci (acQTLs) and 12,250 expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs). Through the allelic imbalance analysis, we validate two causative acQTL variants in independent datasets. We observe substantial sharing of genetic controls between gene expression and H3K27ac, particularly within promoters. We infer that 46% of H3K27ac exhibit a concomitant rather than causative relationship with gene expression. By integrating GWAS, eQTLs, acQTLs, and transcription factor binding prediction, we further demonstrate their application, through metabolites dulcitol, phosphatidylcholine (PC) (16:0/16:0) and published phenotypes, in identifying likely causal variants and genes, and discovering sub-threshold GWAS loci. We provide insight into the relationship between regulatory elements and gene expression, and the genetic foundation for dissecting the molecular mechanism of phenotypes.