Abstract
The degree and the origins of quantitative variability of most human plasma proteins are largely unknown. Because the twin study design provides a natural opportunity to estimate the relative contribution of heritability and environment to different traits in human population, we applied here the highly accurate and reproducible SWATH mass spectrometry technique to quantify 1,904 peptides defining 342 unique plasma proteins in 232 plasma samples collected longitudinally from pairs of monozygotic and dizygotic twins at intervals of 2–7 years, and proportioned the observed total quantitative variability to its root causes, genes, and environmental and longitudinal factors. The data indicate that different proteins show vastly different patterns of abundance variability among humans and that genetic control and longitudinal variation affect protein levels and biological processes to different degrees. The data further strongly suggest that the plasma concentrations of clinical biomarkers need to be calibrated against genetic and temporal factors. Moreover, we identified 13 cis‐SNPs significantly influencing the level of specific plasma proteins. These results therefore have immediate implications for the effective design of blood‐based biomarker studies. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000100276Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Molecular Systems BiologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Wiley-BlackwellSubject
SWATH‐MS; Heritability; Longitudinal variability; Plasma biomarkers; Twin studyOrganisational unit
03663 - Aebersold, Rudolf (emeritus) / Aebersold, Rudolf (emeritus)
Funding
147086 - A Technology and Platform for Plasma Protein Biomarker Validation with Applications to Cancer (SNF)
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