Published February 9, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Mixed Effects Modeling of Proliferation Rates in Cell-Based Models: Consequence for Pharmacogenomics and Cancer

Description

The International HapMap project has made publicly available extensive genotypic data on a number of lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs). Building on this resource, many research groups have generated a large amount of phenotypic data on these cell lines to facilitate genetic studies of disease risk or drug response. However, one problem that may reduce the usefulness of these resources is the biological noise inherent to cellular phenotypes. We developed a novel method, termed Mixed Effects Model Averaging (MEM), which pools data from multiple sources and generates an intrinsic cellular growth rate phenotype. This intrinsic growth rate was estimated for each of over 500 HapMap cell lines. We then examined the association of this intrinsic growth rate with gene expression levels and found that almost 30% (2,967 out of 10,748) of the genes tested were significant with FDR less than 10%. We probed further to demonstrate evidence of a genetic effect on intrinsic growth rate by determining a significant enrichment in growth-associated genes among genes targeted by top growth-associated SNPs (as eQTLs). The estimated intrinsic growth rate as well as the strength of the association with genetic variants and gene expression traits are made publicly available through a cell-based pharmacogenomics database, PACdb. This resource should enable researchers to explore the mediating effects of proliferation rate on other phenotypes.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.1002525
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10576

Funding

National Institute of General Medical Sciences
UO1GM61393
National Cancer Institute
University of Chicago Breast Cancer SPORE Grant
National Cancer Institute
RO1 CA136765
National Cancer Institute
University of Chicago Cancer Center Grant
Leukemia and Lymphoma Society
Specialized Center of Research Grant

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Public Health Sciences