4.8 Article

Understanding multicellular function and disease with human tissue-specific networks

Journal

NATURE GENETICS
Volume 47, Issue 6, Pages 569-576

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ng.3259

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Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 GM071966, R01 HG005998, U54 HL117798]
  2. US NIH [T32 CA009528, P20 GM 103534, T32 HG003284, P50 GM071508, HHSN272201000054C]

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Tissue and cell-type identity lie at the core of human physiology and disease. Understanding the genetic underpinnings of complex tissues and individual cell lineages is crucial for developing improved diagnostics and therapeutics. We present genome-wide functional interaction networks for 144 human tissues and cell types developed using a data-driven Bayesian methodology that integrates thousands of diverse experiments spanning tissue and disease states. Tissue-specific networks predict lineage-specific responses to perturbation, identify the changing functional roles of genes across tissues and illuminate relationships among diseases. We introduce NetWAS, which combines genes with nominally significant genome-wide association study (GWAS) P values and tissue-specific networks to identify disease-gene associations more accurately than GWAS alone. Our webserver, GIANT, provides an interface to human tissue networks through multi-gene queries, network visualization, analysis tools including NetWAS and downloadable networks. GIANT enables systematic exploration of the landscape of interacting genes that shape specialized cellular functions across more than a hundred human tissues and cell types.

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