Hello,
I have a more general question about microarrays.
Where do you see the microarray technology going? As far as I know it has basically been replaced by sequencing technologies when it comes to research. Do you know if there are still applications where microarrays are used or where microarrays outperform sequencing?
And how do you assess the value of existing data? Is it still used and if so in which context?
All the best, E
Whenever a large number (e.g. hundreds/thousands/ten thousands) of samples are used, NGS becomes just too expensive. For that reason, SNP arrays are the norm for genome-wide association studies (GWAS), DNA methylation microarrays are the norm for epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) and RNA expression microarrays are the norm for transcriptome-wide association studies (TWAS). Also, they are highly used for meQTL and eQTL mapping. You'd be surprised how common they still are in spite of NGS overcoming almost all of its limitations.
Due to increase in commercial DTC-GTs, microarray market is still strong. For eg 23nme, daytwo, viome etc.