'; ?> geneimprint : Hot off the Press http://www.geneimprint.com/site/hot-off-the-press Daily listing of the most recent articles in epigenetics and imprinting, collected from the PubMed database. en-us Fri, 10 Apr 2026 09:33:33 EDT Fri, 10 Apr 2026 09:33:33 EDT jirtle@radonc.duke.edu james001@jirtle.com Mapping disease loci to biological processes via joint pleiotropic and epigenomic partitioning. Kerner G, Kamitaki N, Strober B, Price AL
Cell Genom (Apr 2026)

Genome-wide association studies have identified thousands of disease-associated loci, yet their biological interpretation remains limited. We propose joint pleiotropic and epigenomic partitioning (J-PEP), a clustering framework that integrates pleiotropic SNP effects on auxiliary traits and tissue-specific epigenomic data to partition disease-associated loci into biologically distinct clusters. We introduce a metric-pleiotropic and epigenomic prediction accuracy (PEPA)-that evaluates how well the clusters predict SNP-to-trait and SNP-to-tissue associations in off-chromosome data. Analyzing summary statistics for 165 diseases/traits (average N = 290,000), J-PEP attained 16%-30% higher PEPA than pleiotropic or epigenomic partitioning approaches, with larger improvements for well-powered traits, consistent with simulations; these gains arise from J-PEP's tendency to upweight signals present in both auxiliary trait and tissue data, emphasizing shared components. Notably, integrating single-cell chromatin accessibility data refined bulk-based clusters, enhancing cell-type resolution and specificity. For type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and other diseases/traits, J-PEP clusters recapitulated known pathways while revealing underexplored biological processes.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Multi-omics Approaches for Biomarker Discovery of Uterine Fibroids: A Systematic Review. Hussein F, Elamin O, Al-Hendy A, Mousa M
Adv Ther (Apr 2026)

Uterine fibroids are the most common benign gynecological tumors, affecting up to 70-80% of women, yet still lack clinically validated biomarkers for disease stratification, monitoring, or therapeutic targeting. Advances in multi-omics technologies offer unprecedented opportunities for biomarker discovery; however, their application in fibroid research remains fragmented across platforms, biological samples, and study designs, limiting translational progress.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Interactions between nutrition and the epigenome: how can it be harnessed for public health? Anastasopoulou M, Dereki I, Sgourou A, Lagoumintzis G
Future Sci OA (Dec 2026)

A substantial body of evidence shows that dietary habits influence gene expression and epigenetic processes, holding significant implications for public health policies. Epigenetic modifications are increasingly associated with metabolic state, disease risk, and biological aging. Translating mechanistic results into scalable, efficient nutritional epigenetics treatments is difficult.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Limitations and opportunities in multi-omics integration for neurodevelopmental, neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders: A systematic review. Behrens LMP, Fernandes GDS, Gonçalves GF, Nunes FVM, Weimer RD, Moreira JCF, Dorn M
Neuroscience (Apr 2026)

Recent advances in high-throughput technologies have led to an increased generation of biological data across genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, epigenomics, and metabolomics. However, a major challenge remains: effectively integrating these multi-omics datasets to allow a more holistic understanding of the complex, interconnected mechanisms underlying human diseases. Neurodevelopmental, neurodegenerative, and psychiatric disorders are particularly multifactorial and heterogeneous, making them candidates for multi-omics approaches. In this context, this systematic review assesses the current state of multi-omics integration in neurological research. Records retrieved from five major databases were processed, and 156 studies were included for further analysis. The most frequently studied conditions were Alzheimer's Disease, Depressive Disorder and Parkinson's Disease, with epigenomics-transcriptomics and metagenomics-metabolomics emerging as the most common omics pairings. The field remains dominated by studies integrating pairs of omics layers. Only a limited number of computational tools are currently being applied to the integration of more than two omics layers, highlighting a gap in comprehensive multi-omics modeling. Despite progress, key challenges persist, including data accessibility and the need for standardized frameworks to allow cross-study comparisons. Moreover, most computational findings lack experimental validation in wet-laboratory settings. Future research should address these challenges, develop scalable algorithms for integrating multi-omics data, and leverage large, open-access datasets. Integrating computational predictions with experimental validation could help researchers prioritize high-confidence biomarkers relevant to clinical applications. Collaborative efforts among bioinformaticians, clinicians, and experimentalists will be essential to translating these advances into clinically actionable solutions.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Melatonin-enabled omics: understanding plant responses to single and combined abiotic stresses for climate-smart agriculture. Raza A, Li Y, Charagh S, Guo C, Zhao M, Hu Z
GM Crops Food (Dec 2026)

Climate change-driven single and combined abiotic stresses pose escalating threats to sustainable, climate-smart agriculture and global food security. Melatonin (MLT, a powerful plant biostimulant) has established noteworthy potential in improving stress tolerance by regulating diverse physiological, biochemical, and molecular responses. Therefore, this review delivers a comprehensive synopsis of MLT-enabled omics responses across genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, miRNAomics, epigenomics, phenomics, ionomics, and microbiomics levels that collectively regulate plant adaptation to multiple abiotic stresses. We also highlight the crosstalk between these omics layers and the power of integrated multi-omics (panomics) approaches to harness the complex regulatory networks underlying MLT-enabled stress tolerance. Lastly, we argue for translating these omics insights into actionable strategies through advanced genetic engineering and synthetic biology platforms to develop MLT-enabled, stress-smart crop plants.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Multi-omics approaches reveal erythroid progenitor cell in cancer: from passive bystander to active player. Li ZZ, Zhou CK, Sun ZJ
Oncogene (Apr 2026)

Cancer remains a leading cause of human mortality worldwide, imposing a substantial public health burden. A deep understanding of the tumor microenvironment (TME) is essential for improving cancer care. Erythroid progenitor cells (EPCs) were traditionally viewed solely as intermediates in erythropoiesis; however, growing evidence indicates their active involvement in cancer progression and immune evasion. Research on EPCs increasingly utilizes omics sequencing technologies. Multi-omics strategies in particular enable in-depth investigation of the functional mechanisms of EPCs and their interactions with tumor and immune cells. This review examines various omics methodologies applied to EPCs from an oncology perspective, including transcriptomics, proteomics, epigenomics, and metabolomics, while critically assessing the advantages and limitations of each approach. Furthermore, it synthesizes how the integration of multiple omics technologies provides a more comprehensive view of EPC biology, particularly through complementary data modalities. This review also discusses artificial intelligence (AI)-powered multi-omics integration strategies and explore the translational potential of EPC-focused research in advancing cancer therapeutics from bench to bedside.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
A cell type enrichment analysis tool for brain DNA methylation data (CEAM). Müller J, Laroche VT, Imm J, Weymouth L, Harvey J, Reijnders RA, Smith AR, van den Hove D, Lunnon K, Cavill R, Pishva E
Epigenetics (Dec 2026)

DNA methylation (DNAm) signatures are highly cell type-specific, yet most epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) are performed on bulk tissue, potentially obscuring critical cell type-specific patterns. Existing computational tools for detecting cell type-specific DNAm changes are often limited by the accuracy of cell type deconvolution algorithms. Here, we introduce CEAM (Cell-type Enrichment Analysis for Methylation), a robust and interpretable framework for cell type enrichment analysis in DNA methylation data. CEAM applies over-representation analysis with cell type-specific CpG panels from Illumina EPIC arrays derived from nuclei-sorted cortical post-mortem brains from neurologically healthy aged individuals. The constructed CpG panels were systematically evaluated using both simulated datasets and published EWAS results from Alzheimer's disease, Lewy body disease, and multiple sclerosis. CEAM demonstrated resilience to shifts in cell type composition, a common confounder in EWAS, and remained robust across a wide range of differentially methylated positions, when upstream modeling of cell type composition was modeled with sufficient accuracy. Application to existing EWAS findings generated in neurodegenerative diseases revealed enrichment patterns concordant with established disease biology, confirming CEAM's biological relevance. The workflow is publicly available as an interactive Shiny app (https://um-dementia-systems-biology.shinyapps.io/CEAM/) enabling rapid, interpretable analysis of cell type-specific DNAm changes from bulk EWAS.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Timing matters in population epigenomics. Cecil CAM, Felix JF, Neumann A
Epigenomics (Apr 2026)

DNA methylation (DNAm) is highly dynamic across the life course; yet, most studies examine it at a single time point and control for age in their analyses. Here we discuss how these practices risk obscuring epigenetic timing effects: age-dependent associations between exposures, DNAm, and health outcomes. We first synthesize growing evidence supporting the existence of epigenetic timing effects. We then outline how - when left unaccounted - these temporal dynamics can complicate the application and interpretation of common approaches in population epigenomics, including multi-cohort meta-analyses, epigenetic clocks, cell-type correction and methylation profile scores. Next, we provide practical recommendations and highlight priorities for moving from static to time-aware epigenetic research, emphasizing the need for repeated DNAm profiling and longitudinal designs. Finally, we discuss how awareness of epigenetic timing effects could ultimately enhance the translational potential of DNAm-based tools for early risk detection, stratification, diagnosis and monitoring.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
TiSMeD: A tissue-specific methylation and expression database for biomarker and translational applications. Cheng J, Lin Z, Wu L, Li Q, Yin H, Wang H, Chen H, Chen X, Ji ZL
Mol Ther Nucleic Acids (Jun 2026)

Tissue-specific methylation sites (TSMs) are important epigenetic features associated with gene regulation, tissue development, and disease pathogenesis. However, the lack of comprehensive and reliable resources for TSMs restricts advancements in epigenetic and translational research. We present TiSMeD (http://www.bio-add.org/TiSMeD/), a multi-omics database integrating 6,782 DNA methylation, 16,894 transcriptome, and 241 proteome profiles across 48 normal human tissues. Using a scoring framework based on SPM and Tscore, we identified 67,427 high-confidence TSMs, 4,607 tissue-specific genes, and 2,833 tissue-specific proteins, along with over 11 million housekeeping methylation sites. TiSMeD enables interactive exploration and data retrieval, supporting biomarker discovery and disease research. We demonstrate its utility in tracing the tissue-of-origin of cell-free DNA (cfDNA), prioritizing 1,849 cancer biomarkers from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), and constructing a multi-cancer tracing and diagnostic model achieving 95.7% accuracy. TiSMeD serves as a robust, user-friendly platform integrating multi-omics data to advance epigenetic research and biomarker translation.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Global analyses of genomic and epigenomic influences on gene expression reveal as a major regulator of cardiac gene expression in response to catecholamine challenge during heart failure. Lahue C, Ravindran S, Dalal A, Avetisyan R, Rau CD
Epigenetics (Dec 2026)

Heart failure arises from maladaptive remodelling driven by genetic and epigenetic networks. Using a systems genetics framework, we mapped how DNA variants and CpG methylation shape cardiac transcriptomes during beta adrenergic stress in the Hybrid Mouse Diversity Panel, a cohort of over 100 fully inbred mouse strains. Expression QTLs (eQTLs), methylation QTLs (mQTLs) and methylation-driven eQTLs (emQTLs) were generated from over 13k expressed genes and 200k hypervariable CpGs in left ventricles. We discovered hundreds of regulatory 'hotspots' that control large portions of the genome, including several that regulate over 10% of the transcriptome and/or methylome. Approximately 16% of these hotspots overlapped with prior GWAS or EWAS signals. We focus on a hotspot on chromosome 12 and identify the serpine peptidase inhibitor , as the most likely driver gene in this hotspot. Experimental knockdown of in neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocytes blunted hypertrophy induced by a variety of hypertrophic signals, while altering predicted target expression and modulating the activity of and . Together, these findings position as a major regulator of stress-responsive cardiac gene programs, highlighting how integration of genetic and epigenetic signals can pinpoint key drivers of heart failure.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Long noncoding RNA H19 in liver development and disease. Montoya-Durango DE, Gobejishvili L
Cell Signal (Jun 2026)

Liver disease is a global health problem responsible for more than two million deaths annually. Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) are major contributors to chronic liver disease-related morbidity and mortality. Factors like diet and alcohol consumption have become key drivers of liver pathologies including steatosis, fibrosis/cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. To date very few treatments are available, hence there is a critical need for the development of novel therapies to slow down the development/progression of liver damage. The long non-coding RNA H19 gene, H19, is an imprinted gene normally expressed from the maternally inherited chromosome and epigenetically silenced in the paternal chromosome. At the embryo stage H19 controls genome-wide methylation, directs the methylation of the imprinted gene network, and regulates organ size. In the livers of neonates, H19 is important for organ maturation but remains silent in the mature organ. H19 re-expression in the adult liver drives de novo lipogenesis and fibrosis and maintains a proliferative state in tumor cells. The complexity of H19 functions in the liver is reflected in its interaction and regulation of a growing number of proteins, and coding and non-coding RNAs involved in metabolism, pro-fibrotic gene networks, cell cycle progression, and chromatin regulation. This review summarizes the findings related to the role of H19 in liver development and in diseases such as fatty liver, fibrosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Partitioning genetic pleiotropy within tissue-specific regulatory patterns. Panja P, Biswas D, Bhattacharjee S
Cell Genom (Apr 2026)

GWAS-associated variants of related complex traits indicate the presence of pleiotropic clusters often related to tissue-specific epigenomic profiles. The authors introduce J-PEP, a novel framework that enables tissue-aware interpretation of complex trait genetic architecture and PEPA, a cross-modal validation metric. J-PEP factorizes trait and tissue data matrices jointly to identify soft clusters of SNPs that capture both pleiotropic and shared epigenomic patterns in tissues, improving both clustering efficiency and mechanistic interpretation.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Multi‑omics and their integration in psoriasis research (Review). Zhang H, Li D, Zhu L, Yan H, Yang L, Yang X, Zhou Y
Mol Med Rep (May 2026)

Psoriasis is a chronic, immune‑mediated skin disorder characterized by keratinocyte hyperproliferation, inflammatory infiltrates and systemic comorbidities. While genetic predisposition and immune dysregulation are established contributors, recent advancements in high‑throughput omics technologies have provided deeper insights into the molecular complexity of psoriasis. The present review synthesized findings from various omics layers, genomics, epigenomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics and microbiomics, to elucidate their roles in psoriasis pathogenesis. Large‑scale genome‑wide association studies have identified both common and region‑specific susceptibility loci. Epigenetic factors and transcription factors regulate psoriasis‑related genes by modulating chromatin accessibility, DNA methylation, non‑coding RNAs and direct gene activation/inactivation, thereby reshaping the transcriptome. Genetic and epigenetic influences also drive significant alterations in the proteome and metabolome, both in the skin and plasma, shedding light on disease mechanisms and offering potential for biomarker discovery. While microbiome research in psoriasis remains in its early stages, shifts in skin and gut microbial communities have been observed, suggesting their involvement in disease pathogenesis. Together, the multi‑layered insights underscore the future potential of integrated systems approaches to unravel disease mechanisms and support the discovery of clinically actionable biomarkers and therapeutic targets, paving the way for more precise diagnosis and targeted therapeutic development in psoriasis.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Epigenomic and transcriptomic analyses reveal cnidocyte specialization in a sea anemone. Kozlovski I, Jaimes-Becerra A, Aleshkina D, Levy M, Moran Y
Open Biol (Apr 2026)

Cnidarians, including corals, hydras, jellyfish and sea anemones, possess specialized stinging cells called cnidocytes that function in prey capture and defense. These cells represent a striking evolutionary innovation and produce distinct types of organelles such as venom-injecting nematocysts and mechanically entangling spirocysts. While their biomechanics and transcriptional regulation have been studied extensively, little is known about their epigenetic regulation. Here, we combined epigenetic profiling with RNA sequencing in the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis to explore regulatory programs underlying cnidocyte diversity. We identified cell-type-specific H3K27ac-marked regulatory elements in promoter-proximal and distal regions and linked them to distinct gene expression programs. This analysis revealed fundamental differences between nematocytes and spirocytes and uncovered a previously unrecognized nematocyte population that expresses the Nep3 toxin but lacks most other toxins. These findings highlight the complexity of cnidocyte regulation and suggest greater cellular diversity within this defining cnidarian cell type than previously appreciated.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Epigenetic analyses suggest different pathways during pregnancy for development of type 1 diabetes in children with high versus low-neutral human leukocyte antigen-risk. Alipoor SD, Ahrens A, Åkesson J, Hillerton T, Gustafsson M, Lerm M, Ludvigsson J
J Intern Med (May 2026)

The development of Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is shaped by genetic predisposition and epigenetic regulation. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) risk alleles are major genetic determinants, but the epigenetic landscape in relation to disease onset remains unclear. Early-life epigenetic modifications may reveal how environmental and epigenetic factors interact in T1D pathogenesis.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Beyond Weight: Systems Biology and Precision Medicine Redefine Obesity as a Multidimensional Disease. Liu Y, Yang Y, Zhu L, Peng W
Diabetes Obes Metab (Apr 2026)

Traditional weight-centered models do not fully capture the biological complexity of obesity. Systems biology offers a new framework by integrating molecular, cellular, clinical, and environmental information to reframe obesity as a heterogeneous, multidimensional disease.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Childhood immune imprinting shapes cohort and period influenza mortality. Hoffman KA, Saad-Roy CM, Mahmud AS
Sci Adv (Apr 2026)

Influenza viruses encountered in childhood can leave a lasting immunological imprint. To disentangle the mortality effects of age, the circulating seasonal strain, and immune history, we fit statistical mortality models to 54 years of influenza mortality data from the United States. We find strong signatures of subtype-level imprinting in H1N1-dominated seasons following the 2009 pandemic-cohorts imprinted with more similar H1N1 strains experience greater protection. Furthermore, we find large differences in age-specific mortality risk across cohorts based on their imprinted strain and the seasonal strains that were dominant throughout their lifetime. In contrast to older H1N1- and H2N2-imprinted cohorts, our results show that more recent cohorts imprinted with H3N2 have experienced substantially higher mortality through most of their lifetime. Our results highlight the long-term consequences of immune imprinting and its impact on period and cohort influenza mortality. Overall, our findings have important implications for vaccination efforts and future influenza mortality burden.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
An integrative single-nucleus multiomic atlas of the human left ventricle identifies gene regulatory network dynamics across cardiac development, aging, and disease. Gao W, Hu P, Wick B, Qiu Q, Zhang H, Li Y, Kang X, Bedi K, Haeussler M, Sasaki K, Margulies K, Wu H
Genome Biol (Apr 2026)

As the first organ to develop in utero, the human heart undergoes extensive molecular, structural and metabolic remodeling during development and must sustain its function throughout life.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
Unraveling the complexity of skin's biological aging utilizing epigenetic clocks. Bienkowska A, Qi M, Kanta K, Del Pilar Bonilla-Tobar M, Völzke H, Gallinat S, Jaspers S, Clemann S, Winnefeld M, Grönniger E, Kaderali L, Falckenhayn C
Clin Epigenetics (Apr 2026)

DNA methylation (DNAm) plays a pivotal role in regulating gene expression and tissue function in the skin, which exhibits a high degree of responsiveness to environmental and lifestyle factors. These factors are believed to contribute to epigenetic drift, a hallmark of aging marked by increased methylation variability and changes in regulatory regions. While epigenetic clocks have advanced our understanding of skin aging, the effects of many modifiable factors on the skin methylome remain largely unknown.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST
A quantitative genetic model for indirect genetic effects and genomic imprinting under random and assortative mating. Krätschmer I, Robinson MR
Genetics (Apr 2026)

An individual's phenotype reflects a complex interplay of the direct effects of their DNA, epigenetic modifications of their DNA induced by their parents, and indirect effects of their parents' DNA. Here, we derive how the genetic variance within a population is changed under the influence of indirect maternal, paternal, and parent-of-origin effects under random mating. We also consider indirect effects of a sibling, in particular how the genetic variance is altered when looking at the phenotypic difference between two siblings. The calculations are then extended to include assortative mating (AM), which alters the variance by inducing increased homozygosity and correlations within and across loci. AM likely leads to covariance of parental genetic effects, a measure of the similarity of parents in the indirect effects they have on their children. We propose that this assortment for parental characteristics, where biological parents create similar environments for their children, can create shared parental effects across traits and the appearance of cross-trait AM. Our theory shows how the resemblance among relatives increases under both AM, indirect, and parent-of-origin effects. When our model is used to predict correlations among relatives in human height, we find that explaining the patterns observed in real data requires both indirect genetic effects and AM. The degree to which direct, indirect, and epigenetic effects shape the phenotypic variance of complex traits remains an open question that requires large-scale family data to be resolved.]]>
Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 EST