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Transcriptome-wide analyses of adipose tissue in outbred rats reveal genetic regulatory mechanisms relevant for human obesity
Crouse, W. L., Das, S. K., Le, T., Keele, G., Holl, K., Seshie, O., Craddock, A. L., Sharma, N. K., Comeau, M. E., Langefeld, C. D., Hawkins, G. A., Mott, R., Valdar, W., & Woods, L. C. S. (2022). Transcriptome-wide analyses of adipose tissue in outbred rats reveal genetic regulatory mechanisms relevant for human obesity. Physiological Genomics, 54(6), 206-219. https://doi.org/10.1152/physiolgenomics.00172.2021
Transcriptomic analysis in metabolically active tissues allows a systems genetics approach to identify causal genes and networks involved in metabolic disease. Outbred heterogeneous stock (HS) rats are used for genetic mapping of complex traits, but todate, a systems genetics analysis of metabolic tissues has not been done. We investigated whether adiposity-associated genes and gene coexpression networks in outbred heterogeneous stock (HS) rats overlap those found in humans. We analyzed RNAseq data from adipose tissue of 415 male HS rats, correlated these transcripts with body weight (BW) and compared transcriptome signatures to two human cohorts: the "African American Genetics of Metabolism and Expression" and "Metabolic Syndrome in Men." We used weighted gene coexpression network analysis to identify adiposity-associated gene networks and mediation analysis to identify genes under genetic control whose expression drives adiposity. We identified 554 orthologous "consensus genes" whose expression correlates with BW in the rat and with body mass index (BMI) in both human cohorts. Consensus genes fell within eight coexpressed networks and were enriched for genes involved in immune system function, cell growth, extracellular matrix organization, and lipid metabolic processes. We identified 19 consensus genes for which genetic variation may influence BW via their expression, including those involved in lipolysis (e.g., Hcar1), inflammation (e.g., Rgs1), adipogenesis (e.g., Tmem120b), or no previously known role in obesity (e.g., St14 and Ms4a6a). Strong concordance between HS rat and human BW/BMI associated transcripts demonstrates translational utility of the rat model, while identification of novel genes expands our knowledge of the genetics underlying obesity.