Eleonora Porcu

Eleonora Porcu

Université de Lausanne

H-index: 40

Europe-Switzerland

About Eleonora Porcu

Eleonora Porcu, With an exceptional h-index of 40 and a recent h-index of 37 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Université de Lausanne, specializes in the field of Genetics.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

DNA methylation may partly explain psychotropic drug-induced metabolic side effects: results from a prospective 1-month observational study

Possible association of 16p11. 2 copy number variation with altered lymphocyte and neutrophil counts (vol 7, 38, 2022)

A polygenic risk score to predict sudden cardiac arrest in patients with cardiovascular disease

Exploiting the mediating role of the metabolome to unravel transcript-to-phenotype associations

Genome-wide Association Studies of Retinal Vessel Tortuosity Identify Numerous Novel Loci Revealing Genes and Pathways Associated With Ocular and Cardiometabolic Diseases

Author Correction: Possible association of 16p11. 2 copy number variation with altered lymphocyte and neutrophil counts

Participation bias in the UK Biobank distorts genetic associations and downstream analyses

Understanding the genetic complexity of puberty timing across the allele frequency spectrum

Eleonora Porcu Information

University

Université de Lausanne

Position

___

Citations(all)

20127

Citations(since 2020)

9112

Cited By

14767

hIndex(all)

40

hIndex(since 2020)

37

i10Index(all)

55

i10Index(since 2020)

51

Email

University Profile Page

Université de Lausanne

Eleonora Porcu Skills & Research Interests

Genetics

Top articles of Eleonora Porcu

DNA methylation may partly explain psychotropic drug-induced metabolic side effects: results from a prospective 1-month observational study

Authors

Céline Dubath,Eleonora Porcu,Aurélie Delacrétaz,Claire Grosu,Nermine Laaboub,Marianna Piras,Armin von Gunten,Philippe Conus,Kerstin Jessica Plessen,Zoltán Kutalik,Chin Bin Eap

Journal

Clinical Epigenetics

Published Date

2024/2/28

BackgroundMetabolic side effects of psychotropic medications are a major drawback to patients’ successful treatment. Using an epigenome-wide approach, we aimed to investigate DNA methylation changes occurring secondary to psychotropic treatment and evaluate associations between 1-month metabolic changes and both baseline and 1-month changes in DNA methylation levels. Seventy-nine patients starting a weight gain inducing psychotropic treatment were selected from the PsyMetab study cohort. Epigenome-wide DNA methylation was measured at baseline and after 1 month of treatment, using the Illumina Methylation EPIC BeadChip.ResultsA global methylation increase was noted after the first month of treatment, which was more pronounced (p < 2.2 × 10–16) in patients whose weight remained stable (< 2.5% weight increase). Epigenome-wide significant methylation changes (p < 9 × 10−8 …

Possible association of 16p11. 2 copy number variation with altered lymphocyte and neutrophil counts (vol 7, 38, 2022)

Authors

Giuliana Giannuzzi,Nicolas Chatron,Katrin Mannik,Chiara Auwerx,Sylvain Pradervand,Gilles Willemin,Kendra Hoekzema,Xander Nuttle,Jacqueline Chrast,Marie C Sadler,Eleonora Porcu,Yann Herault,Bertrand Isidor,Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier,Evan E Eichler,Zoltan Kutalik,Alexandre Reymond

Journal

NPJ Genomic Medicine

Published Date

2022/6/17

Recurrent copy-number variations (CNVs) at chromosome 16p11.2 are associated with neurodevelopmental diseases, skeletal system abnormalities, anemia, and genitourinary defects. Among the 40 protein-coding genes encompassed within the rearrangement, some have roles in leukocyte biology and immunodeficiency, like SPN and CORO1A. We therefore investigated leukocyte differential counts and disease in 16p11.2 CNV carriers. In our clinically-recruited cohort, we identified three deletion carriers from two families (out of 32 families assessed) with neutropenia and lymphopenia. They had no deleterious single-nucleotide or indel variant in known cytopenia genes, suggesting a possible causative role of the deletion. Noticeably, all three individuals had the lowest copy number of the human-specific BOLA2 duplicon (copy-number range: 3–8). Consistent with the lymphopenia and in contrast with the …

A polygenic risk score to predict sudden cardiac arrest in patients with cardiovascular disease

Authors

Eleonora Porcu,Christian Thorball,Alessandra Pia Porretta,Etienne Pruvot,Kim Wiskott,Federica Gilardi,Aurelien Thomas,Claire Redin,Zoltan Kutalik,Tony Fracasso,Olivier Muller,Jacques Fellay

Journal

European Journal Of Human Genetics

Published Date

2023/5/11

A polygenic risk score to predict sudden cardiac arrest in patients with cardiovascular disease English Français login Menu Search Browse Collections Help English Français login Infoscience A polygenic risk score to predict sudden cardiac arrest in patients with cardiovascular disease Porcu, Eleonora; Thorball, Christian; Porretta, Alessandra Pia; Pruvot, Etienne; Wiskott, Kim; Gilardi, Federica; Thomas, Aurelien; Redin, Claire; Kutalik, Zoltan; Fracasso, Tony; Muller, Olivier; Fellay, Jacques 2023 Formats Format BibTeX View Download MARC View Download MARCXML View Download DublinCore View Download EndNote View Download NLM View Download RefWorks View Download RIS View Download Details Title A polygenic risk score to predict sudden cardiac arrest in patients with cardiovascular disease Author(s) Porcu, Eleonora ; Thorball, Christian ; Porretta, Alessandra Pia ; Pruvot, Etienne ; Wiskott, Kim …

Exploiting the mediating role of the metabolome to unravel transcript-to-phenotype associations

Authors

Chiara Auwerx,Marie C Sadler,Tristan Woh,Alexandre Reymond,Zoltán Kutalik,Eleonora Porcu

Journal

Elife

Published Date

2023/3/9

Despite the success of genome-wide association studies (GWASs) in identifying genetic variants associated with complex traits, understanding the mechanisms behind these statistical associations remains challenging. Several methods that integrate methylation, gene expression, and protein quantitative trait loci (QTLs) with GWAS data to determine their causal role in the path from genotype to phenotype have been proposed. Here, we developed and applied a multi-omics Mendelian randomization (MR) framework to study how metabolites mediate the effect of gene expression on complex traits. We identified 216 transcript-metabolite-trait causal triplets involving 26 medically relevant phenotypes. Among these associations, 58% were missed by classical transcriptome-wide MR, which only uses gene expression and GWAS data. This allowed the identification of biologically relevant pathways, such as between ANKH and calcium levels mediated by citrate levels and SLC6A12 and serum creatinine through modulation of the levels of the renal osmolyte betaine. We show that the signals missed by transcriptome-wide MR are found, thanks to the increase in power conferred by integrating multiple omics layer. Simulation analyses show that with larger molecular QTL studies and in case of mediated effects, our multi-omics MR framework outperforms classical MR approaches designed to detect causal relationships between single molecular traits and complex phenotypes.

Genome-wide Association Studies of Retinal Vessel Tortuosity Identify Numerous Novel Loci Revealing Genes and Pathways Associated With Ocular and Cardiometabolic Diseases

Authors

Mattia Tomasoni,Michael Johannes Beyeler,Sofia Ortin Vela,Ninon Mounier,Eleonora Porcu,Tanguy Corre,Daniel Krefl,Alexander Luke Button,Hana Abouzeid,Konstantinidis Lazaros,Murielle Bochud,Reinier Schlingemann,Ciara Bergin,Sven Bergmann

Journal

Ophthalmology Science

Published Date

2023/9/1

PurposeTo identify novel susceptibility loci for retinal vascular tortuosity, to better understand the molecular mechanisms modulating this trait, and reveal causal relationships with diseases and their risk factors.DesignGenome-wide Association Studies (GWAS) of vascular tortuosity of retinal arteries and veins followed by replication meta-analysis and Mendelian randomization (MR).ParticipantsWe analyzed 116 639 fundus images of suitable quality from 63 662 participants from 3 cohorts, namely the UK Biobank (n = 62 751), the Swiss Kidney Project on Genes in Hypertension (n = 397), and OphtalmoLaus (n = 512).MethodsUsing a fully automated retina image processing pipeline to annotate vessels and a deep learning algorithm to determine the vessel type, we computed the median arterial, venous and combined vessel tortuosity measured by the distance factor (the length of a vessel segment over its chord …

Author Correction: Possible association of 16p11. 2 copy number variation with altered lymphocyte and neutrophil counts

Authors

Giuliana Giannuzzi,Nicolas Chatron,Katrin Mannik,Chiara Auwerx,Sylvain Pradervand,Gilles Willemin,Kendra Hoekzema,Xander Nuttle,Jacqueline Chrast,Marie C Sadler,Eleonora Porcu,Yann Herault,Bertrand Isidor,Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier,Evan E Eichler,Zoltan Kutalik,Alexandre Reymond

Journal

NPJ Genomic Medicine

Published Date

2023

“This research has been supported (not financially) by European Reference Network for rare malformation syndromes and rare intellectual and neurodevelopmental disorders, ERN-ITHACA [EU Framework Partnership Agreement ID: 3HP-HP-FPA ERN-01-2016/739516]. This ERN is partly co-funded by the European Union within the framework of the Third Health Programme “ERN-2016-Framework Partnership Agreement 2017-2021”.

Participation bias in the UK Biobank distorts genetic associations and downstream analyses

Authors

Tabea Schoeler,Doug Speed,Eleonora Porcu,Nicola Pirastu,Jean-Baptiste Pingault,Zoltán Kutalik

Journal

Nature Human Behaviour

Published Date

2023/4/27

While volunteer-based studies such as the UK Biobank have become the cornerstone of genetic epidemiology, the participating individuals are rarely representative of their target population. To evaluate the impact of selective participation, here we derived UK Biobank participation probabilities on the basis of 14 variables harmonized across the UK Biobank and a representative sample. We then conducted weighted genome-wide association analyses on 19 traits. Comparing the output from weighted genome-wide association analyses (neffective = 94,643 to 102,215) with that from standard genome-wide association analyses (n = 263,464 to 283,749), we found that increasing representativeness led to changes in SNP effect sizes and identified novel SNP associations for 12 traits. While heritability estimates were less impacted by weighting (maximum change in h2, 5%), we found substantial discrepancies for …

Understanding the genetic complexity of puberty timing across the allele frequency spectrum

Authors

Katherine A Kentistou,Lena R Kaisinger,Stasa Stankovic,Marc Vaudel,Edson M de Oliveira,Andrea Messina,Robin G Walters,Xiaoxi Liu,Alexander S Busch,Hannes Helgason,Deborah J Thompson,Federico Santon,Konstantin M Petricek,Yassine Zouaghi,Isabel Huang-Doran,Daniel F Gudbjartsson,Eirik Bratland,Kuang Lin,Eugene J Gardner,Yajie Zhao,Raina Jia,Chikashi Terao,Margie Riggan,Manjeet K Bolla,Mojgan Yazdanpanah,Nahid Yazdanpanah,Jonath P Bradfield,Linda Broer,Archie Campbell,Daniel I Chasman,Diana L Cousminer,Nora Franceschini,Lude H Franke,Giorgia Girotto,Chunyan He,Marjo-Riitta Järvelin,Peter K Joshi,Yoichiro Kamatani,Robert Karlsson,Jian’an Luan,Kathryn L Lunetta,Reedik Mägi,Massimo Mangino,Sarah E Medland,Christa Meisinger,Raymond Noordam,Teresa Nutile,Maria Pina Concas,Ozren Polašek,Eleonora Porcu,Susan M Ring,Cinzia Sala,Albert V Smith,Toshiko Tanaka,Peter J van der Most,Veronique Vitart,Carol A Wang,Gonneke Willemsen,Marek Zygmunt,Thomas U Ahearn,Irene L Andrulis,Hoda Anton-Culver,Antonis C Antoniou,Paul L Auer,Catriona LK Barnes,Matthias W Beckmann,Amy Berrington,Natalia V Bogdanova,Stig E Bojesen,Hermann Brenner,Julie E Buring,Federico Canzian,Jenny Chang-Claude,Fergus J Couch,Angela Cox,Laura Crisponi,Kamila Czene,Mary B Daly,Ellen W Demerath,Joe Dennis,Peter Devilee,Immaculata De Vivo,Thilo Dörk,Alison M Dunning,Miriam Dwek,Johan G Eriksson,Peter A Fasching,Lindsay Fernandez-Rhodes,Liana Ferreli,Olivia Fletcher,Manuela Gago-Dominguez,Montserrat García-Closas,José A García-Sáenz,Anna González-Neira,Harald Grallert,Pascal Guénel,Christopher A Haiman,Per Hall,Ute Hamann,Hakon Hakonarson,Roger J Hart,Martha Hickey,Maartje J Hooning,Reiner Hoppe,John L Hopper,Jouke-Jan Hottenga,Frank B Hu,Hanna Hübner,David J Hunter,Helena Jernström,Esther M John,David Karasik,Elza K Khusnutdinova,Vessela N Kristensen,James V Lacey,Diether Lambrechts,Lenore J Launer,Penelope A Lind,Annika Lindblom,Patrik Ke Magnusson,Arto Mannermaa,Mark I McCarthy,Thomas Meitinger,Cristina Menni,Kyriaki Michailidou,Iona Y Millwood,Roger L Milne,Grant W Montgomery,Heli Nevanlinna,Ilja M Nolte,Dale R Nyholt,Nadia Obi,Katie M O’Brien,Kenneth Offit,Albertine J Oldehinkel,Sisse R Ostrowski,Aarno Palotie,Ole B Pedersen,Annette Peters,Giulia Pianigiani,Dijana Plaseska-Karanfilska,Anneli Pouta,Alfred Pozarickij,Paolo Radice,Gad Rennert,Frits R Rosendaal,Daniela Ruggiero,Emmanouil Saloustros,Dale P Sandler,Sabine Schipf

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2023/6/20

Pubertal timing varies considerably and has been associated with a range of health outcomes in later life. To elucidate the underlying biological mechanisms, we performed multi-ancestry genetic analyses in~ 800,000 women, identifying 1,080 independent signals associated with age at menarche. Collectively these loci explained 11% of the trait variance in an independent sample, with women at the top and bottom 1% of polygenic risk exhibiting a~ 11 and~ 14-fold higher risk of delayed and precocious pubertal development, respectively. These common variant analyses were supported by exome sequence analysis of~ 220,000 women, identifying several genes, including rare loss of function variants in ZNF483 which abolished the impact of polygenic risk. Next, we implicated 660 genes in pubertal development using a combination of in silico variant-to-gene mapping approaches and integration with dynamic …

Omics-informed CNV calls reduce false-positive rates and improve power for CNV-trait associations

Authors

Maarja Lepamets,Chiara Auwerx,Margit Nõukas,Annique Claringbould,Eleonora Porcu,Mart Kals,Tuuli Jürgenson,Estonian Biobank Research Tea,Andrew Paul Morris,Urmo Võsa,Murielle Bochud,Silvia Stringhini,Cisca Wijmenga,Lude Franke,Hedi Peterson,Jaak Vilo,Kaido Lepik,Mägi Reedik,Kutalik Zoltan

Journal

Human Genetics and Genomics Advances

Published Date

2022

Copy-number variations (CNV) are believed to play an important role in a wide range of complex traits, but discovering such associations remains challenging. While whole-genome sequencing (WGS) is the gold-standard approach for CNV detection, there are several orders of magnitude more samples with available genotyping microarray data. Such array data can be exploited for CNV detection using dedicated software (e.g., PennCNV); however, these calls suffer from elevated false-positive and -negative rates. In this study, we developed a CNV quality score that weights PennCNV calls (pCNVs) based on their likelihood of being true positive. First, we established a measure of pCNV reliability by leveraging evidence from multiple omics data (WGS, transcriptomics, and methylomics) obtained from the same samples. Next, we built a predictor of omics-confirmed pCNVs, termed omics-informed quality score …

Limited evidence for blood eQTLs in human sexual dimorphism

Authors

Eleonora Porcu,Annique Claringbould,Antoine Weihs,Kaido Lepik,BIOS Consortium,Tom G Richardson,Uwe Völker,Federico A Santoni,Alexander Teumer,Lude Franke,Alexandre Reymond,Zoltán Kutalik

Journal

Genome medicine

Published Date

2022/8/11

BackgroundThe genetic underpinning of sexual dimorphism is very poorly understood. The prevalence of many diseases differs between men and women, which could be in part caused by sex-specific genetic effects. Nevertheless, only a few published genome-wide association studies (GWAS) were performed separately in each sex. The reported enrichment of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) among GWAS-associated SNPs suggests a potential role of sex-specific eQTLs in the sex-specific genetic mechanism underlying complex traits.MethodsTo explore this scenario, we combined sex-specific whole blood RNA-seq eQTL data from 3447 European individuals included in BIOS Consortium and GWAS data from UK Biobank. Next, to test the presence of sex-biased causal effect of gene expression on complex traits, we performed sex-specific transcriptome-wide Mendelian randomization (TWMR) analyses …

A cross-disorder dosage sensitivity map of the human genome

Authors

Ryan L Collins,Joseph T Glessner,Eleonora Porcu,Maarja Lepamets,Rhonda Brandon,Christopher Lauricella,Lide Han,Theodore Morley,Lisa-Marie Niestroj,Jacob Ulirsch,Selin Everett,Daniel P Howrigan,Philip M Boone,Jack Fu,Konrad J Karczewski,Georgios Kellaris,Chelsea Lowther,Diane Lucente,Kiana Mohajeri,Margit Nõukas,Xander Nuttle,Kaitlin E Samocha,Mi Trinh,Farid Ullah,Urmo Võsa,Andres Metspalu,Reedik Mägi,Mari Nelis,Lili Milani,Tõnu Esko,Matthew E Hurles,Swaroop Aradhya,Erica E Davis,Hilary Finucane,James F Gusella,Aura Janze,Nicholas Katsanis,Ludmila Matyakhina,Benjamin M Neale,David Sanders,Stephanie Warren,Jennelle C Hodge,Dennis Lal,Douglas M Ruderfer,Jeanne Meck,Alexandre Reymond,Zoltán Kutalik,Hakon Hakonarson,Shamil Sunyaev,Harrison Brand,Michael E Talkowski

Journal

Cell

Published Date

2022/8/4

Rare copy-number variants (rCNVs) include deletions and duplications that occur infrequently in the global human population and can confer substantial risk for disease. In this study, we aimed to quantify the properties of haploinsufficiency (i.e., deletion intolerance) and triplosensitivity (i.e., duplication intolerance) throughout the human genome. We harmonized and meta-analyzed rCNVs from nearly one million individuals to construct a genome-wide catalog of dosage sensitivity across 54 disorders, which defined 163 dosage sensitive segments associated with at least one disorder. These segments were typically gene dense and often harbored dominant dosage sensitive driver genes, which we were able to prioritize using statistical fine-mapping. Finally, we designed an ensemble machine-learning model to predict probabilities of dosage sensitivity (pHaplo & pTriplo) for all autosomal genes, which identified 2 …

DNA methylation may mediate psychotropic drug-induced metabolic side effects: results from a 1-month observational study

Authors

C Dubath,E Porcu,A Delacrétaz,C Grosu,N Laaboub,M Piras,A Von Gunten,P Conus,K Von Plessen,Z Kutalik,C Eap

Journal

European Psychiatry

Published Date

2022/6

IntroductionMetabolic side effects of psychotropic medications are a major drawback to patients’ effective treatment. Among the mechanisms underlying their development, DNA methylation may be involved.ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to estimate DNA methylation changes occurring secondary to psychotropic treatment and evaluate associations between 1-month metabolic changes and baseline DNA methylation or 1-month DNA methylation changes, using an epigenome-wide approach.MethodsSeventy-nine psychiatric patients recruited as part of PsyMetab study, who started a treatment with either an antipsychotic, a mood stabilizer or mirtazapine were selected. Epigenome-wide DNA methylation was measured using the Illumina Methylation EPIC BeadChip at baseline and after one month of treatment.ResultsA global methylation increase was observed after 1 month of treatment, which was more …

Quantifying the role of transcript levels in mediating DNA methylation effects on complex traits and diseases

Authors

Marie C Sadler,Chiara Auwerx,Kaido Lepik,Eleonora Porcu,Zoltán Kutalik

Journal

Nature Communications

Published Date

2022/12/7

High-dimensional omics datasets provide valuable resources to determine the causal role of molecular traits in mediating the path from genotype to phenotype. Making use of molecular quantitative trait loci (QTL) and genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics, we propose a multivariable Mendelian randomization (MVMR) framework to quantify the proportion of the impact of the DNA methylome (DNAm) on complex traits that is propagated through the assayed transcriptome. Evaluating 50 complex traits, we find that on average at least 28.3% (95% CI: [26.9%–29.8%]) of DNAm-to-trait effects are mediated through (typically multiple) transcripts in the cis-region. Several regulatory mechanisms are hypothesized, including methylation of the promoter probe cg10385390 (chr1:8’022’505) increasing the risk for inflammatory bowel disease by reducing PARK7 expression. The proposed integrative …

The individual and global impact of copy-number variants on complex human traits

Authors

Chiara Auwerx,Maarja Lepamets,Marie C Sadler,Marion Patxot,Miloš Stojanov,David Baud,Reedik Mägi,Tõnu Esko,Andres Metspalu,Lili Milani,Mari Nelis,Eleonora Porcu,Alexandre Reymond,Zoltán Kutalik

Journal

The American Journal of Human Genetics

Published Date

2022/4/7

The impact of copy-number variations (CNVs) on complex human traits remains understudied. We called CNVs in 331,522 UK Biobank participants and performed genome-wide association studies (GWASs) between the copy number of CNV-proxy probes and 57 continuous traits, revealing 131 signals spanning 47 phenotypes. Our analysis recapitulated well-known associations (e.g., 1q21 and height), revealed the pleiotropy of recurrent CNVs (e.g., 26 and 16 traits for 16p11.2-BP4-BP5 and 22q11.21, respectively), and suggested gene functionalities (e.g., MARF1 in female reproduction). Forty-eight CNV signals (38%) overlapped with single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-GWASs signals for the same trait. For instance, deletion of PDZK1, which encodes a urate transporter scaffold protein, decreased serum urate levels, while deletion of RHD, which encodes the Rhesus blood group D antigen, associated with …

Sphingolipids accumulate in aged muscle, and their reduction counteracts sarcopenia

Authors

Pirkka-Pekka Laurila,Martin Wohlwend,Tanes Imamura de Lima,Peiling Luan,Sébastien Herzig,Nadège Zanou,Barbara Crisol,Maroun Bou-Sleiman,Eleonora Porcu,Hector Gallart-Ayala,Michal K Handzlik,Qi Wang,Suresh Jain,Davide D’Amico,Minna Salonen,Christian M Metallo,Zoltan Kutalik,Thomas O Eichmann,Nicolas Place,Julijana Ivanisevic,Jari Lahti,Johan G Eriksson,Johan Auwerx

Journal

Nature Aging

Published Date

2022/12

Age-related muscle dysfunction and sarcopenia are major causes of physical incapacitation in older adults and currently lack viable treatment strategies. Here we find that sphingolipids accumulate in mouse skeletal muscle upon aging and that both genetic and pharmacological inhibition of sphingolipid synthesis prevent age-related decline in muscle mass while enhancing strength and exercise capacity. Inhibition of sphingolipid synthesis confers increased myogenic potential and promotes protein synthesis. Within the sphingolipid pathway, we show that accumulation of dihydroceramides is the culprit disturbing myofibrillar homeostasis. The relevance of sphingolipid pathways in human aging is demonstrated in two cohorts, the UK Biobank and Helsinki Birth Cohort Study in which gene expression-reducing variants of SPTLC1 and DEGS1 are associated with improved and reduced fitness of older individuals …

Triangulating evidence from longitudinal and Mendelian randomization studies of metabolomic biomarkers for type 2 diabetes

Authors

Eleonora Porcu,Federica Gilardi,Liza Darrous,Loic Yengo,Nasim Bararpour,Marie Gasser,Pedro Marques-Vidal,Philippe Froguel,Gerard Waeber,Aurelien Thomas,Zoltán Kutalik

Journal

Scientific Reports

Published Date

2021/3/18

The number of people affected by Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is close to half a billion and is on a sharp rise, representing a major and growing public health burden. Given its mild initial symptoms, T2DM is often diagnosed several years after its onset, leaving half of diabetic individuals undiagnosed. While several classical clinical and genetic biomarkers have been identified, improving early diagnosis by exploring other kinds of omics data remains crucial. In this study, we have combined longitudinal data from two population-based cohorts CoLaus and DESIR (comprising in total 493 incident cases vs. 1360 controls) to identify new or confirm previously implicated metabolomic biomarkers predicting T2DM incidence more than 5 years ahead of clinical diagnosis. Our longitudinal data have shown robust evidence for valine, leucine, carnitine and glutamic acid being predictive of future conversion to T2DM. We …

Quantifying mediation between omics layers and complex traits

Authors

Marie C Sadler,Chiara Auwerx,Eleonora Porcu,Zoltán Kutalik

Journal

bioRxiv

Published Date

2021/10/1

BackgroundHigh-dimensional omics datasets provide valuable resources to determine the causal role of molecular traits in mediating the path from genotype to phenotype. Making use of quantitative trait loci (QTL) and genome-wide association studies (GWASs) summary statistics, we developed a multivariable Mendelian randomization (MVMR) framework to quantify the connectivity between three omics layers (DNA methylome (DNAm), transcriptome and proteome) and their cascading causal impact on complex traits and diseases.ResultsEvaluating 50 complex traits, we found that on average 37.8% (95% CI: [36.0%-39.5%]) of DNAm-to-trait effects were mediated through transcripts in the cis-region, while only 15.8% (95% CI: [11.9%-19.6%]) are mediated through proteins in cis. DNAm sites typically regulate multiple transcripts, and while found to predominantly decrease gene expression, this was only the case for 53.4% across ≈ 47,000 significant DNAm-transcript pairs. The average mediation proportion for transcript-to-trait effects through proteins (encoded for by the assessed transcript or located in trans) was estimated to be 5.27% (95%CI: [4.11%-6.43%]). Notable differences in the transcript and protein QTL architectures were detected with only 22% of protein levels being causally driven by their corresponding transcript levels. Several regulatory mechanisms were hypothesized including an example where cg10385390 (chr1:8’022’505) increases the risk of irritable bowel disease by reducing PARK7 transcript and protein expression.ConclusionsThe proposed integrative framework identified putative causal chains through omics layers …

Genome-wide association study of circulating interleukin 6 levels identifies novel loci

Authors

Tarunveer S Ahluwalia,Bram P Prins,Mohammadreza Abdollahi,Nicola J Armstrong,Stella Aslibekyan,Lisa Bain,Barbara Jefferis,Jens Baumert,Marian Beekman,Yoav Ben-Shlomo,Joshua C Bis,Braxton D Mitchell,Eco De Geus,Graciela E Delgado,Diana Marek,Joel Eriksson,Eero Kajantie,Stavroula Kanoni,John P Kemp,Chen Lu,Riccardo E Marioni,Stela McLachlan,Yuri Milaneschi,Ilja M Nolte,Alexandros M Petrelis,Eleonora Porcu,Maria Sabater-Lleal,Elnaz Naderi,Ilkka Seppälä,Tina Shah,Gaurav Singhal,Marie Standl,Alexander Teumer,Anbupalam Thalamuthu,Elisabeth Thiering,Stella Trompet,Christie M Ballantyne,Emelia J Benjamin,Juan P Casas,Catherine Toben,George Dedoussis,Joris Deelen,Peter Durda,Jorgen Engmann,Mary F Feitosa,Harald Grallert,Ann Hammarstedt,Sarah E Harris,Georg Homuth,Jouke-Jan Hottenga,Sirpa Jalkanen,Yalda Jamshidi,Magdalene C Jawahar,Tine Jess,Mika Kivimaki,Marcus E Kleber,Jari Lahti,Yongmei Liu,Pedro Marques-Vidal,Dan Mellström,Simon P Mooijaart,Martina Müller-Nurasyid,Brenda Penninx,Joana A Revez,Peter Rossing,Katri Räikkönen,Naveed Sattar,Hubert Scharnagl,Bengt Sennblad,Angela Silveira,Beate St Pourcain,Nicholas J Timpson,Julian Trollor,CHARGE Inflammation Working Group,Jenny van Dongen,Diana Van Heemst,Sophie Visvikis-Siest,Peter Vollenweider,Uwe Völker,Melanie Waldenberger,Gonneke Willemsen,Delilah Zabaneh,Richard W Morris,Donna K Arnett,Bernhard T Baune,Dorret I Boomsma,Yen-Pei C Chang,Ian J Deary,Panos Deloukas,Johan G Eriksson,David M Evans,Manuel A Ferreira,Tom Gaunt,Vilmundur Gudnason,Anders Hamsten,Joachim Heinrich,Aroon Hingorani,Steve E Humphries,J Wouter Jukema,Wolfgang Koenig,Meena Kumari,Zoltan Kutalik,Deborah A Lawlor,Terho Lehtimäki,Winfried März,Karen A Mather,Silvia Naitza,Matthias Nauck,Claes Ohlsson,Jackie F Price,Olli Raitakari,Ken Rice,Perminder S Sachdev,Eline Slagboom,Thorkild IA Sørensen,Tim Spector,David Stacey,Maria G Stathopoulou,Toshiko Tanaka,S Goya Wannamethee,Peter Whincup,Jerome I Rotter,Abbas Dehghan,Eric Boerwinkle,Bruce M Psaty,Harold Snieder,Behrooz Z Alizadeh

Journal

Human Molecular Genetics

Published Date

2021/3/1

Interleukin 6 (IL-6) is a multifunctional cytokine with both pro- and anti-inflammatory properties with a heritability estimate of up to 61%. The circulating levels of IL-6 in blood have been associated with an increased risk of complex disease pathogenesis. We conducted a two-staged, discovery and replication meta genome-wide association study (GWAS) of circulating serum IL-6 levels comprising up to 67 428 (ndiscovery = 52 654 and nreplication = 14 774) individuals of European ancestry. The inverse variance fixed effects based discovery meta-analysis, followed by replication led to the identification of two independent loci, IL1F10/IL1RN rs6734238 on chromosome (Chr) 2q14, (Pcombined = 1.8 × 10−11), HLA-DRB1/DRB5 rs660895 on Chr6p21 (Pcombined = 1.5 × 10−10) in the combined meta-analyses of all samples. We also replicated the IL6R rs4537545 locus on Chr1q21 (Pcombined …

Large-scale cis- and trans-eQTL analyses identify thousands of genetic loci and polygenic scores that regulate blood gene expression

Authors

Urmo Võsa,Annique Claringbould,Harm-Jan Westra,Marc Jan Bonder,Patrick Deelen,Biao Zeng,Holger Kirsten,Ashis Saha,Roman Kreuzhuber,Seyhan Yazar,Harm Brugge,Roy Oelen,Dylan H de Vries,Monique GP van der Wijst,Silva Kasela,Natalia Pervjakova,Isabel Alves,Marie-Julie Favé,Mawussé Agbessi,Mark W Christiansen,Rick Jansen,Ilkka Seppälä,Lin Tong,Alexander Teumer,Katharina Schramm,Gibran Hemani,Joost Verlouw,Hanieh Yaghootkar,Reyhan Sönmez Flitman,Andrew Brown,Viktorija Kukushkina,Anette Kalnapenkis,Sina Rüeger,Eleonora Porcu,Jaanika Kronberg,Johannes Kettunen,Bernett Lee,Futao Zhang,Ting Qi,Jose Alquicira Hernandez,Wibowo Arindrarto,Frank Beutner,BIOS Consortium’t Hoen Peter AC 68 van Meurs Joyce 27 van Dongen Jenny 69 van Iterson Maarten 42 Swertz Morris A. 6,i2QTL Consortium Jan Bonder Marc 1 5,Julia Dmitrieva,Mahmoud Elansary,Benjamin P Fairfax,Michel Georges,Bastiaan T Heijmans,Alex W Hewitt,Mika Kähönen,Yungil Kim,Julian C Knight,Peter Kovacs,Knut Krohn,Shuang Li,Markus Loeffler,Urko M Marigorta,Hailang Mei,Yukihide Momozawa,Martina Müller-Nurasyid,Matthias Nauck,Michel G Nivard,Brenda WJH Penninx,Jonathan K Pritchard,Olli T Raitakari,Olaf Rotzschke,Eline P Slagboom,Coen DA Stehouwer,Michael Stumvoll,Patrick Sullivan,Peter AC ’t Hoen,Joachim Thiery,Anke Tönjes,Jenny van Dongen,Maarten van Iterson,Jan H Veldink,Uwe Völker,Robert Warmerdam,Cisca Wijmenga,Morris Swertz,Anand Andiappan,Grant W Montgomery,Samuli Ripatti,Markus Perola,Zoltan Kutalik,Emmanouil Dermitzakis,Sven Bergmann,Timothy Frayling,Joyce van Meurs,Holger Prokisch,Habibul Ahsan,Brandon L Pierce,Terho Lehtimäki,Dorret I Boomsma,Bruce M Psaty,Sina A Gharib,Philip Awadalla,Lili Milani,Willem H Ouwehand,Kate Downes,Oliver Stegle,Alexis Battle,Peter M Visscher,Jian Yang,Markus Scholz,Joseph Powell,Greg Gibson,Tõnu Esko,Lude Franke

Journal

Nature genetics

Published Date

2021/9

Trait-associated genetic variants affect complex phenotypes primarily via regulatory mechanisms on the transcriptome. To investigate the genetics of gene expression, we performed cis- and trans-expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) analyses using blood-derived expression from 31,684 individuals through the eQTLGen Consortium. We detected cis-eQTL for 88% of genes, and these were replicable in numerous tissues. Distal trans-eQTL (detected for 37% of 10,317 trait-associated variants tested) showed lower replication rates, partially due to low replication power and confounding by cell type composition. However, replication analyses in single-cell RNA-seq data prioritized intracellular trans-eQTL. Trans-eQTL exerted their effects via several mechanisms, primarily through regulation by transcription factors. Expression of 13% of the genes correlated with polygenic scores for 1,263 phenotypes, pinpointing …

Gene regulation contributes to explain the impact of early life socioeconomic disadvantage on adult inflammatory levels in two cohort studies

Authors

Cristian Carmeli,Zoltán Kutalik,Pashupati P Mishra,Eleonora Porcu,Cyrille Delpierre,Olivier Delaneau,Michelle Kelly-Irving,Murielle Bochud,Nasser A Dhayat,Belen Ponte,Menno Pruijm,Georg Ehret,Mika Kähönen,Terho Lehtimäki,Olli T Raitakari,Paolo Vineis,Mika Kivimäki,Marc Chadeau-Hyam,Emmanouil Dermitzakis,Nicolas Vuilleumier,Silvia Stringhini

Journal

Scientific reports

Published Date

2021/2/4

Individuals experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage in childhood have a higher rate of inflammation-related diseases decades later. Little is known about the mechanisms linking early life experiences to the functioning of the immune system in adulthood. To address this, we explore the relationship across social-to-biological layers of early life social exposures on levels of adulthood inflammation and the mediating role of gene regulatory mechanisms, epigenetic and transcriptomic profiling from blood, in 2,329 individuals from two European cohort studies. Consistently across both studies, we find transcriptional activity explains a substantive proportion (78% and 26%) of the estimated effect of early life disadvantaged social exposures on levels of adulthood inflammation. Furthermore, we show that mechanisms other than cis DNA methylation may regulate those transcriptional fingerprints. These results further our …

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Eleonora Porcu FAQs

What is Eleonora Porcu's h-index at Université de Lausanne?

The h-index of Eleonora Porcu has been 37 since 2020 and 40 in total.

What are Eleonora Porcu's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

DNA methylation may partly explain psychotropic drug-induced metabolic side effects: results from a prospective 1-month observational study

Possible association of 16p11. 2 copy number variation with altered lymphocyte and neutrophil counts (vol 7, 38, 2022)

A polygenic risk score to predict sudden cardiac arrest in patients with cardiovascular disease

Exploiting the mediating role of the metabolome to unravel transcript-to-phenotype associations

Genome-wide Association Studies of Retinal Vessel Tortuosity Identify Numerous Novel Loci Revealing Genes and Pathways Associated With Ocular and Cardiometabolic Diseases

Author Correction: Possible association of 16p11. 2 copy number variation with altered lymphocyte and neutrophil counts

Participation bias in the UK Biobank distorts genetic associations and downstream analyses

Understanding the genetic complexity of puberty timing across the allele frequency spectrum

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are the top articles of Eleonora Porcu at Université de Lausanne.

What are Eleonora Porcu's research interests?

The research interests of Eleonora Porcu are: Genetics

What is Eleonora Porcu's total number of citations?

Eleonora Porcu has 20,127 citations in total.

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