Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

General information

URL: http://www.ewas.org.cn/ewasdb
Full name: Epigenome-Wide Association Study Database
Description: EWAS is Epigenome-wide association studies. EWAS provides a systematic approach to uncovering epigenetic variants underlying common diseases/phenotypes.
Year founded: 2019
Last update: 2018-10
Version:
Accessibility:
Manual:
Accessible
Real time : Checking...
Country/Region: China

Classification & Tag

Data type:
DNA
Data object:
Database category:
Major species:
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: Harbin Medical University
Address:
City: Harbin
Province/State: Heilongjiang
Country/Region: China
Contact name (PI/Team): Yongshuai Jiang
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): jiangyongshuai@gmail.com

Publications

30321400
EWASdb: epigenome-wide association study database. [PMID: 30321400]
Liu D, Zhao L, Wang Z, Zhou X, Fan X, Li Y, Xu J, Hu S, Niu M, Song X, Li Y, Zuo L, Lei C, Zhang M, Tang G, Huang M, Zhang N, Duan L, Lv H, Zhang M, Li J, Xu L, Kong F, Feng R, Jiang Y.

DNA methylation, the most intensively studied epigenetic modification, plays an important role in understanding the molecular basis of diseases. Furthermore, epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) provides a systematic approach to identify epigenetic variants underlying common diseases/phenotypes. However, there is no comprehensive database to archive the results of EWASs. To fill this gap, we developed the EWASdb, which is a part of 'The EWAS Project', to store the epigenetic association results of DNA methylation from EWASs. In its current version (v 1.0, up to July 2018), the EWASdb has curated 1319 EWASs associated with 302 diseases/phenotypes. There are three types of EWAS results curated in this database: (i) EWAS for single marker; (ii) EWAS for KEGG pathway and (iii) EWAS for GO (Gene Ontology) category. As the first comprehensive EWAS database, EWASdb has been searched or downloaded by researchers from 43 countries to date. We believe that EWASdb will become a valuable resource and significantly contribute to the epigenetic research of diseases/phenotypes and have potential clinical applications. EWASdb is freely available at http://www.ewas.org.cn/ewasdb or http://www.bioapp.org/ewasdb.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2019:47(D1) | 22 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-06)

Ranking

All databases:
1949/6000 (67.533%)
Genotype phenotype and variation:
278/852 (67.488%)
Modification:
117/287 (59.582%)
Standard ontology and nomenclature:
92/221 (58.824%)
1949
Total Rank
21
Citations
4.2
z-index

Community reviews

Not Rated
Data quality & quantity:
Content organization & presentation
System accessibility & reliability:

Word cloud

Related Databases

Citing
Cited by

Record metadata

Created on: 2019-01-04
Curated by:
Dong Zou [2019-01-11]
Dong Zou [2019-01-04]