Activation of inflammatory pathways in human IBD
Activation of an IL-6:STAT3-dependent transcriptome in pediatric-onset inflammatory bowel disease.
No sample metadata fields
View SamplesThe goals of this study were to determine global differences in transcript expression and regulation between MM cells that are sensitive or insensitive to lovastatin-induced apoptosis. To this end, two sensitive (KMS11 and H929) and two insensitive (LP1 and SKMM1) MM cell lines treated with 20uM lovastatin or an ethanol vehicle control for 16 hours. mRNA was extracted and prepared for mRNA expression microarrays (HG-U133 Plus 2) in triplicate.
Exploiting the mevalonate pathway to distinguish statin-sensitive multiple myeloma.
Specimen part, Cell line, Treatment
View SamplesRNA was isolated from rectal biopsies from 190 pediatric patients undergoing diagnostic colonoscopy for inflammatory bowel diseases, including Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. Single-end, 75-bp sequencing was performed, and raw reads aligned to the human genome using Gencode v 24 as reference. We included 14085 protein-coding mRNA genes in downstream analyses, where cutoffs of fold change>1.5 and FDR<0.05 were considered significant. Overall design: RNA-sequencing of rectal biopsies obtained from pediatric IBD and control patients.
Ulcerative colitis mucosal transcriptomes reveal mitochondriopathy and personalized mechanisms underlying disease severity and treatment response.
Specimen part, Disease, Subject
View SamplesWe report the whole transcriptome data of single-cells derived from the early 16-cell stage to the 64-cell stage in the mouse embryo. Overall design: RNA from 262 cells from 36 mouse embryos (16- to 64-cell stage)
Position- and Hippo signaling-dependent plasticity during lineage segregation in the early mouse embryo.
Cell line, Subject
View SamplesBackground: Patients with early stage non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) may benefit from treatments based on more accurate prognosis. A 15-gene prognostic classifier for NSCLC was identified from mRNA expression profiling of tumor samples from the NCIC CTG JBR.10 trial. Here, we assessed its value in an independent set of cases.
Validation of a histology-independent prognostic gene signature for early-stage, non-small-cell lung cancer including stage IA patients.
Sex, Age
View SamplesAn important question for the use of the mouse as a model for studying human disease is the degree of functional conservation of genetic control pathways from human to mouse. The human placenta and mouse placenta show structural similarities but there has been no systematic attempt to assess their molecular similarities or differences. We built a comprehensive database of protein and microarray data for the highly vascular exchange region micro-dissected from the human and mouse placenta near-term. Abnormalities in this region are associated with two of the most common and serious complications of human pregnancy, maternal preeclampsia (PE) and fetal intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), each disorder affecting ~5% of all pregnancies.
Comparative systems biology of human and mouse as a tool to guide the modeling of human placental pathology.
No sample metadata fields
View SamplesPurpose: To explore intratumor heterogeneity in gene expression profiles from patients with cervical cancer.
Gene expression profiling in cervical cancer: an exploration of intratumor heterogeneity.
Age, Disease stage
View SamplesUnderstanding how lung progenitor cells balance
Integrated proteomic and transcriptomic profiling of mouse lung development and Nmyc target genes.
No sample metadata fields
View Samplescomparison of expression of wildtype lungs and lungs with hypomorphic expression of nmyc. the lungs were pooled from several biological samples. The hypomorphoic mutant was orignally published in Moens CB et al [PMID: 1577267]. this is part of a larger collection of data comparing nmyc misexpression in the lung (gain of fucntion) and protein expression in the hypomorphic lungs.
Integrated proteomic and transcriptomic profiling of mouse lung development and Nmyc target genes.
No sample metadata fields
View SamplesOGR1 is a pH-sensing G-protein coupled receptor involved in intestinal homeostasis and inflammation
The pH-sensing receptor OGR1 improves barrier function of epithelial cells and inhibits migration in an acidic environment.
Specimen part, Cell line, Treatment
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