Connection

RICHARD KELLERMAYER to Genome-Wide Association Study

This is a "connection" page, showing publications RICHARD KELLERMAYER has written about Genome-Wide Association Study.
  1. Hurdles for epigenetic disease associations from peripheral blood leukocytes. Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2013 Apr; 19(5):E66-7.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.254
  2. Blood-Derived DNA Methylation Signatures of Crohn's Disease and Severity of Intestinal Inflammation. Gastroenterology. 2019 06; 156(8):2254-2265.e3.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.095
  3. Transcriptional risk scores link GWAS to eQTLs and predict complications in Crohn's disease. Nat Genet. 2017 Oct; 49(10):1517-1521.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.086
  4. Genome-wide peripheral blood leukocyte DNA methylation microarrays identified a single association with inflammatory bowel diseases. Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2012 Dec; 18(12):2334-41.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.059
  5. Methylation quantitative trait loci are largely consistent across disease states in Crohn's disease. G3 (Bethesda). 2022 04 04; 12(4).
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.030
  6. Whole-genome sequencing of African Americans implicates differential genetic architecture in inflammatory bowel disease. Am J Hum Genet. 2021 03 04; 108(3):431-445.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.027
  7. Prioritizing Crohn's disease genes by integrating association signals with gene expression implicates monocyte subsets. Genes Immun. 2019 09; 20(7):577-588.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.024
  8. Genome-Wide Association Study Identifies African-Specific Susceptibility Loci in African Americans With Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Gastroenterology. 2017 01; 152(1):206-217.e2.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.020
  9. DNA Methylation Profiling in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Provides New Insights into Disease Pathogenesis. J Crohns Colitis. 2016 Jan; 10(1):77-86.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.019
Connection Strength

The connection strength for concepts is the sum of the scores for each matching publication.

Publication scores are based on many factors, including how long ago they were written and whether the person is a first or senior author.