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Multi-omics epigenom-bred associationsstudie×Epigenom-dækkende associationsstudie (EWAS)×
FagområdeBioinformatikBioinformatik
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Oprindelsesår2011 (EWAS foundation); multi-omics integration ~2015–20202008–2011 (term and framework established c. 2011)
OphavspersonRakyan, Down, Balding & Beck (EWAS framework); multi-omics integration extended by multiple groups (~2015–2020)Rakyan, Down, Balding & Beck (conceptual framework); Illumina arrays enabled large-scale application
TypeIntegrative association studyPopulation-scale epigenomic association study
Oprindelig kildeRakyan, V. K., Down, T. A., Balding, D. J., & Beck, S. (2011). Epigenome-wide association studies for common human diseases. Nature Reviews Genetics, 12(8), 529–541. DOI ↗Rakyan, V. K., Down, T. A., Balding, D. J., & Beck, S. (2011). Epigenome-wide association studies for common human diseases. Nature Reviews Genetics, 12(8), 529–541. DOI ↗
Aliassermulti-omics EWAS, integrative EWAS, multi-layer epigenome-wide association, multi-omics epigenomic integrationEWAS, methylome-wide association study, epigenetic association study, DNA methylation association study
Relaterede45
ResuméA multi-omics epigenome-wide association study (multi-omics EWAS) systematically scans the entire epigenome — typically DNA methylation at CpG sites — for associations with a phenotype of interest, then integrates findings across additional omics layers such as transcriptomics, genomics, proteomics, or metabolomics. By linking epigenetic variation to molecular changes at multiple biological levels simultaneously, this approach identifies regulatory mechanisms and biomarkers that single-omics EWAS cannot resolve.An epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) is a hypothesis-free, genome-scale method that systematically tests whether epigenetic marks — predominantly CpG-site DNA methylation — differ between individuals with and without a trait, disease, or exposure. By scanning hundreds of thousands of genomic positions simultaneously, EWAS identifies loci where the epigenome is reproducibly associated with a phenotype, offering a layer of biological regulation that classical GWAS does not capture.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Multi-omics epigenome-wide association study · Epigenome-wide association study. Hentet 2026-06-19 fra https://scholargate.app/da/compare