Englander Institute for Precision Medicine

A genome-wide association study of mass spectrometry proteomics using the Seer Proteograph platform.

TitleA genome-wide association study of mass spectrometry proteomics using the Seer Proteograph platform.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsSuhre K, Chen Q, Halama A, Mendez K, Dahlin A, Stephan N, Thareja G, Sarwath H, Guturu H, Dwaraka VB, Batzoglou S, Schmidt F, Lasky-Su JA
JournalbioRxiv
Date Published2024 Jun 01
Abstract

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) with proteomics are essential tools for drug discovery. To date, most studies have used affinity proteomics platforms, which have limited discovery to protein panels covered by the available affinity binders. Furthermore, it is not clear to which extent protein epitope changing variants interfere with the detection of protein quantitative trait loci (pQTLs). Mass spectrometry-based (MS) proteomics can overcome some of these limitations. Here we report a GWAS using the MS-based Seer Proteograph™ platform with blood samples from a discovery cohort of 1,260 American participants and a replication in 325 individuals from Asia, with diverse ethnic backgrounds. We analysed 1,980 proteins quantified in at least 80% of the samples, out of 5,753 proteins quantified across the discovery cohort. We identified 252 and replicated 90 pQTLs, where 30 of the replicated pQTLs have not been reported before. We further investigated 200 of the strongest associated cis-pQTLs previously identified using the SOMAscan and the Olink platforms and found that up to one third of the affinity proteomics pQTLs may be affected by epitope effects, while another third were confirmed by MS proteomics to be consistent with the hypothesis that genetic variants induce changes in protein expression. The present study demonstrates the complementarity of the different proteomics approaches and reports pQTLs not accessible to affinity proteomics, suggesting that many more pQTLs remain to be discovered using MS-based platforms.

DOI10.1101/2024.05.27.596028
Alternate JournalbioRxiv
PubMed ID38853852
PubMed Central IDPMC11160678
Grant ListR01 HL123915 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
R01 HL155742 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
U19 AI168643 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States

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