Merits and challenges of plasma proteomics on association replicability
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Developments in proteomic platforms have enabled the generation of large-scale high-throughput plasma proteomics data [1-3]. With recent breakthroughs in AI modelling, these data have significantly enhanced our understanding of molecular mechanisms underlying human behaviors and diseases [4-6]. However, the replicability of associations between plasma proteomics and phenotypes remains underexplored. Here, we systematically assessed the replicability of associations with recent plasma proteomics data in the UK biobank. Over 75% of cognitive function and mental health traits demonstrated high overall (proteomics-wide) replicability when brain-related traits were considered as phenotypes. Although mean cortical thickness (CT) as phenotype exhibited clearly reduced replicability, total cortical surface area (CSA) and cortical volume (CV) showed high overall replicability across hemispheres and over twenty brain regions. In comparative multi-omics analyses based on the same cohort of participants, proteomics outperformed genomics across all brain-related traits, and exceeded metabolomics for over half of traits where metabolomics also exhibited high overall replicability. Furthermore, we developed a predictive framework to estimate the replicability for potential future proteomics panels based on the crucial influential factors including dilution level, proportion of samples below the limit of detection (LOD), and sample size. Moreover, we constructed an individual replicability index for proteins and identified eleven proteins with highly replicable associations across cognitive function and mental health traits, which was in line with the recent identifications of pleiotropic proteins in large-scale population studies. Collectively, our results revealed the challenges in the association replicability of plasma proteomics under reduced data quality (from "Explore" to "Expansion" assay panels), and we further explored how to sustain high replicability in potential future panels. Fundamentally, our findings affirm the merits of plasma proteomics: this molecular omics platform enables highly replicable associations for mapping biomedical signatures.