A large-scale analysis of tissue-specific pathology and gene expression of human disease genes and complexes

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

A large-scale analysis of tissue-specific pathology and gene expression of human disease genes and complexes. / Hansen, Kasper Lage; Hansen, Niclas Tue; Karlberg, E Olof; Eklund, Aron C; Roque, Francisco S; Donahoe, Patricia K; Szallasi, Zoltan; Jensen, Thomas Skøt; Brunak, Søren.

In: Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America, Vol. 105, No. 52, 2008, p. 20870-5.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hansen, KL, Hansen, NT, Karlberg, EO, Eklund, AC, Roque, FS, Donahoe, PK, Szallasi, Z, Jensen, TS & Brunak, S 2008, 'A large-scale analysis of tissue-specific pathology and gene expression of human disease genes and complexes', Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America, vol. 105, no. 52, pp. 20870-5. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0810772105

APA

Hansen, K. L., Hansen, N. T., Karlberg, E. O., Eklund, A. C., Roque, F. S., Donahoe, P. K., Szallasi, Z., Jensen, T. S., & Brunak, S. (2008). A large-scale analysis of tissue-specific pathology and gene expression of human disease genes and complexes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America, 105(52), 20870-5. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0810772105

Vancouver

Hansen KL, Hansen NT, Karlberg EO, Eklund AC, Roque FS, Donahoe PK et al. A large-scale analysis of tissue-specific pathology and gene expression of human disease genes and complexes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America. 2008;105(52):20870-5. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0810772105

Author

Hansen, Kasper Lage ; Hansen, Niclas Tue ; Karlberg, E Olof ; Eklund, Aron C ; Roque, Francisco S ; Donahoe, Patricia K ; Szallasi, Zoltan ; Jensen, Thomas Skøt ; Brunak, Søren. / A large-scale analysis of tissue-specific pathology and gene expression of human disease genes and complexes. In: Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America. 2008 ; Vol. 105, No. 52. pp. 20870-5.

Bibtex

@article{57880f707f9a11df928f000ea68e967b,
title = "A large-scale analysis of tissue-specific pathology and gene expression of human disease genes and complexes",
abstract = "Heritable diseases are caused by germ-line mutations that, despite tissuewide presence, often lead to tissue-specific pathology. Here, we make a systematic analysis of the link between tissue-specific gene expression and pathological manifestations in many human diseases and cancers. Diseases were systematically mapped to tissues they affect from disease-relevant literature in PubMed to create a disease-tissue covariation matrix of high-confidence associations of >1,000 diseases to 73 tissues. By retrieving >2,000 known disease genes, and generating 1,500 disease-associated protein complexes, we analyzed the differential expression of a gene or complex involved in a particular disease in the tissues affected by the disease, compared with nonaffected tissues. When this analysis is scaled to all diseases in our dataset, there is a significant tendency for disease genes and complexes to be overexpressed in the normal tissues where defects cause pathology. In contrast, cancer genes and complexes were not overexpressed in the tissues from which the tumors emanate. We specifically identified a complex involved in XY sex reversal that is testis-specific and down-regulated in ovaries. We also identified complexes in Parkinson disease, cardiomyopathies, and muscular dystrophy syndromes that are similarly tissue specific. Our method represents a conceptual scaffold for organism-spanning analyses and reveals an extensive list of tissue-specific draft molecular pathways, both known and unexpected, that might be disrupted in disease.",
author = "Hansen, {Kasper Lage} and Hansen, {Niclas Tue} and Karlberg, {E Olof} and Eklund, {Aron C} and Roque, {Francisco S} and Donahoe, {Patricia K} and Zoltan Szallasi and Jensen, {Thomas Sk{\o}t} and S{\o}ren Brunak",
note = "Keywords: Databases, Factual; Female; Gene Expression Regulation; Genetic Diseases, Inborn; Genome, Human; Germ-Line Mutation; Humans; Male; Oncogenes; Organ Specificity; Ovary; Proteome; PubMed; Sex Reversal, Gonadal; Testis",
year = "2008",
doi = "10.1073/pnas.0810772105",
language = "English",
volume = "105",
pages = "20870--5",
journal = "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America",
issn = "0027-8424",
publisher = "The National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America",
number = "52",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A large-scale analysis of tissue-specific pathology and gene expression of human disease genes and complexes

AU - Hansen, Kasper Lage

AU - Hansen, Niclas Tue

AU - Karlberg, E Olof

AU - Eklund, Aron C

AU - Roque, Francisco S

AU - Donahoe, Patricia K

AU - Szallasi, Zoltan

AU - Jensen, Thomas Skøt

AU - Brunak, Søren

N1 - Keywords: Databases, Factual; Female; Gene Expression Regulation; Genetic Diseases, Inborn; Genome, Human; Germ-Line Mutation; Humans; Male; Oncogenes; Organ Specificity; Ovary; Proteome; PubMed; Sex Reversal, Gonadal; Testis

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - Heritable diseases are caused by germ-line mutations that, despite tissuewide presence, often lead to tissue-specific pathology. Here, we make a systematic analysis of the link between tissue-specific gene expression and pathological manifestations in many human diseases and cancers. Diseases were systematically mapped to tissues they affect from disease-relevant literature in PubMed to create a disease-tissue covariation matrix of high-confidence associations of >1,000 diseases to 73 tissues. By retrieving >2,000 known disease genes, and generating 1,500 disease-associated protein complexes, we analyzed the differential expression of a gene or complex involved in a particular disease in the tissues affected by the disease, compared with nonaffected tissues. When this analysis is scaled to all diseases in our dataset, there is a significant tendency for disease genes and complexes to be overexpressed in the normal tissues where defects cause pathology. In contrast, cancer genes and complexes were not overexpressed in the tissues from which the tumors emanate. We specifically identified a complex involved in XY sex reversal that is testis-specific and down-regulated in ovaries. We also identified complexes in Parkinson disease, cardiomyopathies, and muscular dystrophy syndromes that are similarly tissue specific. Our method represents a conceptual scaffold for organism-spanning analyses and reveals an extensive list of tissue-specific draft molecular pathways, both known and unexpected, that might be disrupted in disease.

AB - Heritable diseases are caused by germ-line mutations that, despite tissuewide presence, often lead to tissue-specific pathology. Here, we make a systematic analysis of the link between tissue-specific gene expression and pathological manifestations in many human diseases and cancers. Diseases were systematically mapped to tissues they affect from disease-relevant literature in PubMed to create a disease-tissue covariation matrix of high-confidence associations of >1,000 diseases to 73 tissues. By retrieving >2,000 known disease genes, and generating 1,500 disease-associated protein complexes, we analyzed the differential expression of a gene or complex involved in a particular disease in the tissues affected by the disease, compared with nonaffected tissues. When this analysis is scaled to all diseases in our dataset, there is a significant tendency for disease genes and complexes to be overexpressed in the normal tissues where defects cause pathology. In contrast, cancer genes and complexes were not overexpressed in the tissues from which the tumors emanate. We specifically identified a complex involved in XY sex reversal that is testis-specific and down-regulated in ovaries. We also identified complexes in Parkinson disease, cardiomyopathies, and muscular dystrophy syndromes that are similarly tissue specific. Our method represents a conceptual scaffold for organism-spanning analyses and reveals an extensive list of tissue-specific draft molecular pathways, both known and unexpected, that might be disrupted in disease.

U2 - 10.1073/pnas.0810772105

DO - 10.1073/pnas.0810772105

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 19104045

VL - 105

SP - 20870

EP - 20875

JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

SN - 0027-8424

IS - 52

ER -

ID: 20473576