ScholarGate
Assistent

Sammenlign metoder

Gennemgå dine valgte metoder side om side; rækker, der afviger, er fremhævet.

Differential eQTL Analyse×Genomdækkende associationsstudie (GWAS)×
FagområdeBioinformatikBioinformatik
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Oprindelsesår2007–20122005–2007
OphavspersonPioneered by GTEx Consortium and Stranger et al.; formal differential testing approaches developed ~2007–2012Klein et al. (age-related macular degeneration GWAS, 2005); landmark scale: Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (2007)
TypeStatistical genomics pipelineObservational genomic association study
Oprindelig kildeStranger, B. E., et al. (2007). Relative impact of nucleotide and copy number variation on gene expression phenotypes. Science, 315(5813), 848–853. DOI ↗Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium. (2007). Genome-wide association study of 14,000 cases of seven common diseases and 3,000 shared controls. Nature, 447(7145), 661–678. link ↗
AliasserdeQTL analysis, context-specific eQTL, interaction eQTL, conditional eQTLGWAS, genome-wide association analysis, whole-genome association study, WGAS
Relaterede66
ResuméDifferential eQTL analysis identifies genetic variants — expression quantitative trait loci — whose regulatory effect on gene expression varies systematically across biological conditions such as tissue types, disease states, developmental stages, or treatment groups. By testing for statistical interactions between genotype and condition, the method pinpoints loci where the same allele has different transcriptional consequences depending on context, revealing the molecular basis of condition-specific gene regulation.A genome-wide association study (GWAS) systematically tests hundreds of thousands to millions of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across the human genome for statistical association with a trait or disease. By comparing allele frequencies between cases and controls — or by regressing SNP genotypes on a quantitative phenotype — GWAS identifies genomic loci that harbor common genetic variants contributing to complex traits. Since its large-scale debut in 2007, GWAS has catalogued thousands of robust disease–variant associations across virtually every common human condition.
ScholarGateDatasæt
  1. v1
  2. 2 Kilder
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 Kilder
  3. PUBLISHED

Gå til søgning Hent slides

ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Differential eQTL Analysis · Genome-wide association study. Hentet 2026-06-18 fra https://scholargate.app/da/compare