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  |  | This slide is
  illustrates two major types of QTLs that modulate variability in
  transcript-relative steady state abundance. 
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  |  | 1. cis QTLs are defined
  as QTLs that are closely linked to the gene whose transcript is the measured
  trait. For example, a polymorphism in the promoter that affects binding of a
  transcription factor. However, cis QTLs can be far upstream or downstream polymorphisms
  in enhancers or may be in 3Õ UTR binding sites that affect message stability. 
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  |  | 
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  |  | 2. trans QTLs map far
  enough away from the location of the gene that gives rise to the transcript
  that is being measured so that we can be fairly certain that the QTL is not
  in the gene itself. The most blatant type of trans QTL would be a
  polymorphism in a transcription factor. But in the majority of cases, the
  trans QTLs can be far removed in a mechanistic sense from the actual events
  modulating transcript abundance. That is why there are three overlapping
  arrows in the figure.  The way in
  which an upstream polymorphism influences a downstream difference in mRNA
  abundance can be indirect. Effects can: 
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  |  | a.  cross tissue types (a polymorphic liver enzyme may affect
  CNS gene expression) 
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  |  | b.  cross time (the modulator is only expressed for one day
  during development but has permanent effects in adults) 
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  |  | c.  may be contingent on environmental factors (heat shock may
  trigger the expression of a polymorphic factor that affects mRNA abundance). 
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