Recent studies suggest that context-specific eQTLs underlie genetic risk factors for complex diseases. However, methods for identifying them are still nascent, limiting their comprehensive characterization and downstream interpretation of disease-associated variants. Here, we introduce FastGxC, a method to efficiently and powerfully map context-specific eQTLs by leveraging the correlation structure of multi-context studies. We first show via simulations that FastGxC is orders of magnitude more powerful and computationally efficient than previous approaches, making previously year-long computations possible in minutes. We next apply FastGxC to bulk multi-tissue and single-cell RNA-seq data sets to produce the most comprehensive tissue- and cell-type-specific eQTL maps to date. We then validate these maps by establishing that context-specific eQTLs are enriched in corresponding functional genomic annotations. Finally, we examine the relationship between context-specific eQTLs and human disease and show that FastGxC context-specific eQTLs provide a three-fold increase in precision to identify relevant tissues and cell types for GWAS variants than standard eQTLs. In summary, FastGxC enables the construction of context-specific eQTL maps that can be used to understand the context-specific gene regulatory mechanisms underlying complex human diseases.
Over 90% of genetic variants associated with complex human traits map to non-coding regions, but little is understood about how they modulate gene regulation in health and disease. In one mechanism, disease-causing variants directly affect the activity of one or more cis-regulatory elements in specific cell types leading to dysregulation of gene expression. To identify such Our results provide insights into how genetic variants modulate cis-regulatory elements, in isolation or in concert, and influence gene expression in primary immune cells that play a key role in many human diseases.
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