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genomweite

Genomweite, a term used in German-language genomics, describes analyses conducted across the entire genome; in English, the corresponding term is genome-wide. The genome-wide approach underpins methods such as genome-wide association studies (GWAS), which test hundreds of thousands to millions of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for association with a trait or disease using large cohorts. Data are generated by SNP genotyping arrays or whole-genome sequencing, often augmented by imputation to infer untyped variants. Researchers apply stringent multiple-testing corrections, typically a genome-wide significance threshold around 5×10^-8, and adjust for population structure and covariates.

In addition to genetic variation, genome-wide analyses extend to other molecular layers, such as methylation (epigenome-wide

The term genomweite is commonly used in German-language literature to refer to genome-wide analyses; in English,

association
studies,
EWAS)
and
expression
(transcriptome-wide
studies).
Genome-wide
approaches
enable
discovery
of
novel
loci
with
modest
effects
and
may
reveal
polygenic
architectures,
including
many
variants
with
small
effects
acting
together.
However,
they
require
large
sample
sizes,
careful
control
of
bias,
and
independent
replication
to
validate
findings.
Limitations
include
residual
confounding
by
ancestry,
imputation
inaccuracies
for
rare
variants,
and
interpretational
challenges
for
noncoding
regions.
the
corresponding
term
is
genome-wide.
Overall,
genome-wide
analyses
are
foundational
in
modern
genetics,
enabling
comprehensive
surveys
of
the
genome
to
understand
complex
traits
and
diseases.