Recommendations for accurate resolution of gene and isoform allele-specific expression in RNA-seq data

Wood, D. L.A., Nones, K., Steptoe, A., Christ, A., Harliwong, I., Newell, F., Bruxner, T. J.C., Miller, D., Cloonan, N. and Grimmond, S. M. (2015) Recommendations for accurate resolution of gene and isoform allele-specific expression in RNA-seq data. PLoS ONE, 10(5), e0126911. (doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0126911) (PMID:25965996) (PMCID:PMC4428808)

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Abstract

Genetic variation modulates gene expression transcriptionally or post-transcriptionally, and can profoundly alter an individual’s phenotype. Measuring allelic differential expression at heterozygous loci within an individual, a phenomenon called allele-specific expression (ASE), can assist in identifying such factors. Massively parallel DNA and RNA sequencing and advances in bioinformatic methodologies provide an outstanding opportunity to measure ASE genome-wide. In this study, matched DNA and RNA sequencing, genotyping arrays and computationally phased haplotypes were integrated to comprehensively and conservatively quantify ASE in a single human brain and liver tissue sample. We describe a methodological evaluation and assessment of common bioinformatic steps for ASE quantification, and recommend a robust approach to accurately measure SNP, gene and isoform ASE through the use of personalized haplotype genome alignment, strict alignment quality control and intragenic SNP aggregation. Our results indicate that accurate ASE quantification requires careful bioinformatic analyses and is adversely affected by sample specific alignment confounders and random sampling even at moderate sequence depths. We identified multiple known and several novel ASE genes in liver, including WDR72, DSP and UBD, as well as genes that contained ASE SNPs with imbalance direction discordant with haplotype phase, explainable by annotated transcript structure, suggesting isoform derived ASE. The methods evaluated in this study will be of use to researchers performing highly conservative quantification of ASE, and the genes and isoforms identified as ASE of interest to researchers studying those loci.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Grimmond, Professor Sean
Authors: Wood, D. L.A., Nones, K., Steptoe, A., Christ, A., Harliwong, I., Newell, F., Bruxner, T. J.C., Miller, D., Cloonan, N., and Grimmond, S. M.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cancer Sciences
Journal Name:PLoS ONE
Publisher:Public Library of Science
ISSN:1932-6203
ISSN (Online):1932-6203
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2015 The Authors
First Published:First published in PLoS ONE 10(5):e0126911
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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