4.8 Article

Genetic analysis of radiation-induced changes in human gene expression

Journal

NATURE
Volume 459, Issue 7246, Pages 587-U120

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature07940

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Funding

  1. National Center for Research Resources
  2. National Institutes of Health
  3. University of Pennsylvania Center for Excellence in Environmental Toxicology
  4. W. W. Smith Endowed Chair
  5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Humans are exposed to radiation through the environment and in medical settings. To deal with radiation-induced damage, cells mount complex responses that rely on changes in gene expression. These gene expression responses differ greatly between individuals(1) and contribute to individual differences in response to radiation(2). Here we identify regulators that influence expression levels of radiation-responsive genes. We treated radiation-induced changes in gene expression as quantitative phenotypes(3,4), and conducted genetic linkage and association studies to map their regulators. For more than 1,200 of these phenotypes there was significant evidence of linkage to specific chromosomal regions. Nearly all of the regulators act in trans to influence the expression of their target genes; there are very few cis-acting regulators. Some of the transacting regulators are transcription factors, but others are genes that were not known to have a regulatory function in radiation response. These results have implications for our basic and clinical understanding of how human cells respond to radiation.

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