EWAS Atlas: a curated knowledgebase of epigenome-wide association studies

Mengwei Li(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Dong Zou(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Zhaohua Li(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Ran Gao(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Jian Sang(University of Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yuansheng Zhang(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Rujiao Li(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Lin Xia(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Tāo Zhāng(University of Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guangyi Niu(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Yīmíng Bào(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Zhang Zhang(University of Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 17, 2018
Cited by 326Open Access
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Abstract

Epigenome-Wide Association Study (EWAS) has become increasingly significant in identifying the associations between epigenetic variations and different biological traits. In this study, we develop EWAS Atlas (http://bigd.big.ac.cn/ewas), a curated knowledgebase of EWAS that provides a comprehensive collection of EWAS knowledge. Unlike extant data-oriented epigenetic resources, EWAS Atlas features manual curation of EWAS knowledge from extensive publications. In the current implementation, EWAS Atlas focuses on DNA methylation-one of the key epigenetic marks; it integrates a large number of 329 172 high-quality EWAS associations, involving 112 tissues/cell lines and covering 305 traits, 1830 cohorts and 390 ontology entities, which are completely based on manual curation from 649 studies reported in 401 publications. In addition, it is equipped with a powerful trait enrichment analysis tool, which is capable of profiling trait-trait and trait-epigenome relationships. Future developments include regular curation of recent EWAS publications, incorporation of more epigenetic marks and possible integration of EWAS with GWAS. Collectively, EWAS Atlas is dedicated to the curation, integration and standardization of EWAS knowledge and has the great potential to help researchers dissect molecular mechanisms of epigenetic modifications associated with biological traits.


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