Here's a little widget to play with the data across journals (as well as download the raw CSVs).
sashagusev.github.io/Genetics_Pub...
Posts by Dr. Scott C. Ritchie
My thought process here is that perhaps these trans-pQTL hotspots are reflecting some biological factor that is systematically affecting the binding chemistry across a large fraction of binding sites?
Quite possibly power - but then some of the trans-pQTL hotspots have really small p-values across many proteins (e.g. the APOE/NLRP12 locus on chromosme 19) in Sun et al 2018, which is only 2x the sample size here.
I'm quite struck by Figure 1 - there don't appear to be strong trans-pQTL hotspots like we typically see with affinity-based technologies. This makes me wonder if previous trans-pQTL hotspots reflect systematic epitope effects - is this something you've explored at all?
Suspense !
Our new #GWAS with MS #proteomics paper has been scheduled for publication in Nature Genetics on 27 November 2025 at 10:00 (London time) and will be available at the following URL: www.nature.com/articles/s41...
At #EASD and interested in learning about how polygenic risk scores can be use to improve prediction and prevention of type 2 diabetes? Come see my talk at 17:25 today in the Milan Hall as part of the EASD-ADA Joint Symposium. I'll also be around until Friday afternoon if anyone wants to chat.
⏰ Last couple of days to apply to join my group @Cambridge as a postdoc and work on the environmental (un)sustainability of AI!
⏳ Closing September 16th.
✏️ Apply here: tinyurl.com/2ukkp8yx
Or learn more about what we do at www.lannelongue-group.org
Initial examples of research projects below 👇
prcomp() uses BLAS, which depending on the BLAS library and how R was compiled against it when R was installed will default to using all available cores.
Try adding the following code before your call to prcomp():
library(RhpcBLASctl)
blas_set_num_threads(1)
omp_set_num_threads(1)
Reminds me of this classic tweet:
Super excited to see beginning integration of PredictDB into OmicsPred!
We've annotated/deposited the GTExV8 gene expression predictors so they are now available alongside all the other multi-omic predictors at www.omicspred.org
More on its way... a wonderful collab with @hakyim.bsky.social & co!
Has Antony Green called the Eurovision winner yet? #eurovision #auspol #stillwaitingfortheprepolls
Estonia hands down
Feeling mildly emotional that this is Green’s last election coverage. He’s covered every Aus election I’ve ever seen, it won’t be the same without him #auspol
Our work on metabolic reaction fluxes as amplifiers and buffers of risk alleles for coronary artery disease is finally out in @molsystbiol.org !
www.embopress.org/doi/full/10....
A short thread on our key findings 🧵👇
📣 New from the lab: The contribution of genetic determinants of blood gene expression and splicing to molecular phenotypes and health outcomes www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Check out the INTERVAL RNAseq portal www.intervalrna.org.uk
Led by @alextokolyi.bsky.social & Elodie Persyn!
Wonderful to see our collaboration @astrazeneca.bsky.social @dphpc.bsky.social out! Identification of plasma proteomic markers underlying polygenic risk of T2D and related comorbidities @naturecomms.bsky.social www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Well done Doug Loesch, Dirk Paul, Abhishek Nag and co!
New pre-print led by @hwang_seongwon: "Human genetics suggests differing causal pathways from HMGCR inhibition to coronary artery disease and type 2 diabetes": www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1.... Brief thread follows:
Our latest Study just went online:
Comparative Analysis Between Olink-PEA and Alamar-NULISA Proteomic Technologies Applied to a Critically Ill COVID-19 Cohort
analyticalsciencejournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
A screenshot of a search for the NCBI gene website on the internet wayback machine showing snapshot archives available between 2008 and January 2025
Now's a good time for a reminder about the internet wayback machine: web.archive.org
Introducing a major upgrade to OmicsPred platform (www.omicspred.org) — a resource to enhance the accessibility and usability of genetic scores for multi-omic traits and their phenotypic associations. (1/N)
With accompanying editorial piece summarising and contextualising these findings written by myself: www.nature.com/articles/s44...
Out today in Nature Cardiovascular Research, Rasooly and colleagues utilise multiple sources of multi-omic evidence to identify new drug targets for heart failure with reduced and preserved ejection fraction: www.nature.com/articles/s44...
Clinical utility and implementation of polygenic risk scores for predicting cardiovascular disease academic.oup.com/eurheartj/ad...
A clinical consensus statement of the ESC Council on Cardiovascular Genomics, ESC Cardiovascular Risk Collaboration and European Association of Preventive Cardiology
A platform for the biomedical application of large language models https://www.nature.com/articles/s41587-024-02534-3 (read free: https://rdcu.be/d68Ih MIT licensed https://github.com/biocypher/biochatter 🧬🖥️🧪
Flyer for the LPSHG - details in the post
Excited to be tutoring at the Leena Peltonen School of Human Genetics on July 27-31, alongside a stellar crew. If you’re a late-stage or recently graduated PhD student this is an awesome opportunity to get 1:1 time with faculty at the cutting edge of genomics.
Apply by March 7th at lpshg.com
at first glance this just looks like ggplot but 's/geom/add/' 🤔
⏳ Just one more week to apply! 5 roles open in my group working on the Green Algorithms project: 3 research, a Software Engineer Lead and a Community manager/project coordinator
🌱 More details and links to all adverts there: www.green-algorithms.org/join-us/
Closing 25/11
#AcademicSky #SciSky
check out our new preprint led by Charles Zhou and supervised by Mengjie Chen and me doi.org/10.1101/2024... where we present scPrediXcan which integrates deep learning and single cell expression data into a powerful cell type specific TWAS framework
Announcing version 3.2.0 of the ukbnmr R package now available on CRAN: cran.r-project.org/web/packages...
This is a major update that makes the package compatible with the UK Biobank Research Analysis Platform and shows removal of technical variation on the full NMR data release coming Jan 2025