Phenome-wide Mendelian randomization mapping the influence of the plasma proteome on complex diseases
By
Jie Zheng,
Valeriia Haberland,
Denis Baird,
Venexia Walker,
Philip Haycock,
Mark Hurle,
Alex Gutteridge,
Pau Erola,
Yi Liu,
Shan Luo,
Jamie Robinson,
Tom G Richardson,
James R. Staley,
Benjamin Elsworth,
Stephen Burgess,
Benjamin B. Sun,
John Danesh,
Heiko Runz,
Joseph C. Maranville,
Hannah M. Martin,
James Yarmolinsky,
Charles Laurin,
Michael V Holmes,
Jimmy Liu,
Karol Estrada,
Rita Santos,
Linda McCarthy,
Dawn Waterworth,
Matthew R. Nelson,
Gibran Hemani,
George Davey Smith,
Adam S. Butterworth,
Robert A Scott,
Tom R Gaunt
Posted 05 May 2019
bioRxiv DOI: 10.1101/627398
(published DOI: 10.1038/s41588-020-0682-6)
The human proteome is a major source of therapeutic targets. Recent genetic association analyses of the plasma proteome enable systematic evaluation of the causal consequences of variation in plasma protein levels. Here, we estimated the effects of 1002 proteins on 225 phenotypes using two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) and colocalization. Of 413 associations supported by evidence from MR, 130 (31.5%) were not supported by results of colocalization analyses, suggesting that genetic confounding due to linkage disequilibrium (LD) is widespread in naive phenome-wide association studies of proteins. Combining MR and colocalization evidence in cis-only analyses, we identified 111 putatively causal effects between 65 proteins and 52 disease-related phenotypes ([www.epigraphdb.org/pqtl/][1]). Evaluation of data from historic drug development programmes showed that target-indication pairs with MR and colocalization support were more likely to be approved, evidencing the value of our approach in identifying and prioritising potential therapeutic targets. [1]: http://www.epigraphdb.org/pqtl/
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