Here, I summarized the most important international bigdata project which need to be followed. All of them have large number of genetics and epigeneitcs data to be downloaded and to be used for next model building and knowledge achievement.
International Human Epigenome Consortium (IHEC)
NIH Roadmap Epigenomics Mapping consortium
The Canadian Epigenetics, Environment and Health research Consortium (CEEHRC)
The German Epigenome Program - DEEP
International Cancer Genome Consortium
EpiGeneSys - Network of Excellence
International cancer Genome Consortium Project
Pan Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Project
Recount2: analysis-ready RNA-seq gene and exon counts datasets
What about TCGA?
P.S. A one line description of what type of data one can find in each of the project would be helpful.
I will follow All of US project. Just want to know when they will publish some preliminary data.
It may not be for some time. That project just got off to a start a couple of months ago.
As your estimation, how long time they need to publish the first paper? I guess Nature again, right? 3 years or 5 years? Which group will be charge of 'Data Analysis' section?
Your guess is as good as mine. It will all depend on enrollment and when they can actually start doing the analysis. Vanderbilt University Med Center, Verily (Google's life science arm) and Broad Institute have been named data centers but there may be additional ones as project gets underway.
Miss the big train again. Big project has been totally monopolized by these big organization.
Department of Biostatistics at Vanderbilt University
GTEX, transcriptomics though.