In the vast, intricate landscape of the human genome, the vast majority of disease-associated genetic variants lie outside of protein-coding genes. These "noncoding" regions, once dismissed by some as "junk DNA," are now recognized as the master switches of cellular identity, governing how, when, and where genes are expressed. However, pinpointing the specific regulatory elements responsible for complex diseases like type 2 diabetes has remained a daunting challenge for geneticists.
In a recent study published in Human Genetics and Genomics Advances, Dr. Adelaide Tovar, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan Medical School’s Department of Computational Medicine & Bioinformatics, has unveiled a methodological shift that could fundamentally change how we map these regulatory regions. By refining the use of Massively Parallel Reporter Assays (MPRAs), Dr. Tovar’s work offers a clearer, more precise lens through which to view the genetic architecture of disease.
The Core Challenge: Understanding Noncoding Regulatory Elements
To understand the gravity of Dr. Tovar’s research, one must first grasp the limitations of current functional genomics. When researchers identify a genetic variant linked to a disease through genome-wide association studies (GWAS), the signal often points to a noncoding region. While these regions clearly exert influence, determining how they function—and which specific variants are causal—is notoriously difficult.
MPRAs have become the gold standard for testing thousands of these regulatory sequences simultaneously. The process involves inserting candidate DNA sequences into a reporter construct to see if they drive gene expression in a cell culture. However, as Dr. Tovar’s research highlights, the experimental design of these assays is far from neutral. The choice of promoter—the "engine" that initiates gene transcription—and the spatial arrangement of the tested fragments can significantly bias the results.
Chronology: From Statistical Theory to Functional Reality
Dr. Tovar’s path to this discovery was marked by a strategic pivot from statistical genetics to the "wet-lab" realities of functional genomics. During her doctoral training, she focused on the computational side of genetics, identifying associations within massive datasets. Yet, she felt a professional mandate to bridge the gap between discovery and functional validation.
"With my PhD training in statistical genetics and genomics, I was eager to complement my discovery-focused training with functional genomics approaches during my postdoc," Dr. Tovar explains.
When she began her postdoctoral fellowship, she inherited a project from a predecessor that utilized MPRAs to study type 2 diabetes-linked noncoding regions. Rather than viewing the project as a rote exercise, Tovar treated it as a foundational investigation. She began by systematically deconstructing the assay itself. She tested how different promoters and the positioning of regulatory fragments affected the readout. This rigorous, methodical approach—often overlooked in the rush for high-throughput results—allowed her to identify the "context-dependency" that had previously been obscured by more generic experimental protocols.
Supporting Data: The Power of Tissue-Specific Promoters
The central finding of Dr. Tovar’s paper is both simple and profound: the "housekeeping" promoters frequently used in MPRA experiments may be washing out the signal researchers are looking for.
In her study, Dr. Tovar observed that when researchers use a generic, ubiquitously active promoter to test enhancer activity, they often fail to capture the nuanced, tissue-specific activity of regulatory elements. By swapping these generic engines for tissue-specific promoters—promoters that are naturally active in the cell types relevant to type 2 diabetes, such as pancreatic beta cells or hepatocytes—the detection of regulatory activity becomes significantly sharper.
This design change creates a more authentic cellular environment for the regulatory element. The data suggests that when the promoter matches the tissue context of the regulatory element, the assay is far more sensitive to subtle differences in enhancer strength. This discovery effectively provides researchers with a "tuner" for their experiments, allowing them to isolate the regulatory signals that actually drive disease-related gene expression in specific tissues.

Implications for the Human Genetics Community
The implications for the field are twofold: improved experimental design and better prioritization of drug targets.
Refined Atlases of Variant Effects
By adopting tissue-specific promoters, the genetics community can move toward creating more accurate, high-resolution atlases of the noncoding genome. Currently, many "regulatory maps" are somewhat blurry, representing an aggregate of activity that may not exist in any single biological context. Dr. Tovar’s work provides a template for cleaning up these maps, ensuring that future research is based on functionally relevant data rather than assay artifacts.
Prioritizing Causal Variants
For clinicians and pharmaceutical researchers, the ultimate goal is to identify which specific variant among hundreds in a risk locus is actually driving the disease. "My hope is that this work will encourage other researchers to consider the promoters they use in MPRAs and how they might affect the interpretation of variant effects," says Tovar. "For those working in specific disease areas, adopting tissue-specific promoters might yield sharper atlases of noncoding variant effects and better prioritization of causal variants for follow-up experiments."
Navigating the Academic Landscape
Beyond the technical achievements, Dr. Tovar’s journey sheds light on the sociological challenges facing the next generation of scientists. In discussing her career trajectory, she highlights the importance of representation and the often-competitive nature of modern academia.
"One challenge has been the relative scarcity of mentors and visible role models in senior positions who come from similar backgrounds to mine," she reflects. "That kind of representation matters more than I appreciated early in my training, both for navigating the practical realities of pursuing an academic career and for just seeing what’s possible."
Her perspective on the "competitive nature of academic science" serves as a counter-narrative to the hyper-individualistic culture that sometimes plagues scientific research. Instead, she advocates for a model rooted in collaborative success. By emphasizing that her most significant findings were facilitated by colleagues who share this ethos, she illustrates that the most rigorous science often happens in environments where the focus is on collective progress rather than individual accolades.
A Curiosity for Genetics Beyond the Lab
To understand the depth of Dr. Tovar’s commitment to her field, one need only look at her enthusiasm for developments outside her immediate research area. A self-professed "cat lady," Tovar points to a recent, fascinating breakthrough in feline genetics as a perfect example of why she loves the field.
Researchers recently identified the genetic mechanism behind the orange coat color in cats, tracing it to a 5.1 kb deletion in a regulatory element near the ARHGAP36 gene. This discovery is a textbook example of how a phenotypic change can arise from the loss of a regulatory element rather than a change in the protein itself.
"As someone who loves gene regulation, it’s exciting to see an example of a phenotypic change caused by the loss of a regulatory element instead of altered protein function," Tovar notes. This interest underscores her broader career mission: to peel back the layers of the genome and understand how the subtle "tuning" of regulatory elements dictates everything from the coat color of a cat to the metabolic health of a human being.
Conclusion: Setting a New Standard
Dr. Adelaide Tovar’s research in HGG Advances is a reminder that in genomics, the method is often as important as the data itself. By challenging the status quo of MPRA experimental design, she has provided the community with a more precise tool for decoding the noncoding genome. As the field moves toward more personalized medicine and precise genetic diagnostics, the ability to accurately interpret the "dark matter" of the genome will be essential. Through her work, Dr. Tovar is not just discovering new biology; she is refining the very language we use to translate the genetic code into meaningful human health insights.
