About
Aims
We aim to (1) develop new computation methods to investigate the connections between disease-specific DNA-DNA interactions and disease-specific genetic information; (2) investigate their critical biological functions in various cancers and chronic diseases; (3) develop new predictive models to predict novel target genes of genetic variations.
Scientific rationale
New biotechnologies, such as Hi-C, could map interactions between DNA fragments in the genome. Large-scale biobanks such as UK Biobank discover genetic variation associated with various cancer and chronic diseases. However, many of the associated variations do not reside in human genes, challenging the interpretation of their functions and causality with diseases. DNA-DNA interactions revealed by Hi-C biotechnology provides a new lens to resolve this problem. We will develop advanced statistical and machine learning algorithms for interpreting the biological functions and gene-gene interaction for variants relevant to diseases in the UK Biobank, using the DNA-DNA interaction data we collected and the genetic and health information provided by UK Biobank.
Project duration
We intended to finish the project in a 36-month period.
Public health impact
Cancers and chronic diseases are major threats to human health. The difficulty to discover the underlying genetic variations that cause these diseases hinders the prevention and treatment improvement. The computational methods developed in this project and their discoveries would further improve our understanding of the causal relations between human DNA and complex diseases, which could improve the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of cancers and chronic diseases.
10 Publications
| Pub ID | Title | Author(s) | Year | Journal |
| 13430 | Association of ultra-processed food intake with severe non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: a prospective study of 143073 UK Biobank participants | Yi-Feng Zhang (+5) | 2024 | The journal of nutrition, health & aging |
| 18105 | Associations between Body Composition Patterns, Brain Diseases and Injuries, and Risk of Epilepsy: A Prospective Cohort Study | Qingya Zhao (+9) | 2026 | Neuroepidemiology |
| 16894 | Associations of childhood and adulthood maltreatment with postpartum depression and the role of socio-economic position and social contact | Miaohong Zhuang (+5) | 2026 | Journal of Affective Disorders |
| 18411 | Child maltreatment and its association with incident irritable bowel syndrome: genetic risk and mediation pathways in the UK biobank | Wenya Bai (+5) | 2026 | Journal of Public Health |
| 16948 | Child maltreatment linked to incident chronic inflammatory gastrointestinal diseases and its underlying pathways: An analysis of the UK biobank | Shaoli Lin (+6) | 2025 | Child Abuse & Neglect |
| 18643 | Long-term exposure to residential greenspace, bluespace, traffic, and air pollutants with dementia: A prospective cohort study with exploratory mediation by plasma metabolites and telomere length | Qianqian Ji (+4) | 2026 | Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety |
| 17228 | Maternal Smoking during Pregnancy, Smoking Initiation, and the Risk of Epilepsy in the UK Biobank | Qingya Zhao (+8) | 2025 | Neuroepidemiology |
| 15123 | Protective association between dietary phytosterol intake and cardiovascular health: an analysis of the UK Biobank cohort | Wanning Qiao (+9) | 2025 | Food & Function |
| 16592 | Sex-specific analyses of early-life tobacco smoke exposure and later-life irritable bowel syndrome: Sensitive window, mediation pathway, and genetic predisposition | Wenya Bai (+6) | 2025 | Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety |
| 8249 | Variation in VEGFA and risk of cardiovascular disease in the UK Biobank | Hongyin Chen (+6) | 2023 | Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine |