Replicated effects of sex and genotype on gene expression in human lymphoblastoid cell lines

Allan F. McRae*, Nicholas A. Matigian, Lata Vadlamudi, John C. Mulley, Bryan Mowry, Nicholas G. Martin, Sam F. Berkovic, Nicholas K. Hayward, Peter M. Visscher

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    25 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The expression level for 15 887 transcripts in lymphoblastoid cell lines from 19 monozygotic twin pairs (10 male, 9 female) were analysed for the effects of genotype and sex. On an average, the effect of twin pairs explained 31% of the variance in normalized gene expression levels, consistent with previous broad sense heritability estimates. The effect of sex on gene expression levels was most noticeable on the X chromosome, which contained 15 of the 20 significantly differentially expressed genes. A high concordance was observed between the sex difference test statistics and surveys of genes escaping X chromosome inactivation. Notably, several autosomal genes showed significant differences in gene expression between the sexes despite much of the cellular environment differences being effectively removed in the cell lines. A publicly available gene expression data set from the CEPH families was used to validate the results. The heritability of gene expression levels as estimated from the two data sets showed a highly significant positive correlation, particularly when both estimates were close to one and thus had the smallest standard error. There was a large concordance between the genes significantly differentially expressed between the sexes in the two data sets. Analysis of the variability of probe binding intensities within a probe set indicated that results are robust to the possible presence of polymorphisms in the target sequences.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)364-373
    Number of pages10
    JournalHuman Molecular Genetics
    Volume16
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 15 Feb 2007

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