The oocytes of many species, both invertebrate and vertebrate, contain a large collection of localized determinants in the form of proteins and translationally inactive maternal mRNAs. However, it is unknown whether mouse oocytes contain localized MmRNA determinants and what mechanisms might be responsible for their control. We collected intact MII oocytes, enucleated MII oocyte cytoplasts (with the spindle removed), and spindle-chromosome complexes which had been microsurgically removed. RNA was extracted, amplified, labeled, and applied to microarrays to determine if any MmRNA determinants were localized to the SCC.
Association of maternal mRNA and phosphorylated EIF4EBP1 variants with the spindle in mouse oocytes: localized translational control supporting female meiosis in mammals.
Sex, Specimen part, Disease
View SamplesTranscriptomes performed on left ventricular heart samples from mice of the hybrid mouse diversity panel, a set of over a hundred inbred strains of mice. In this project, the strains were challenged with Isoproterenol, a beta-adrenergic agonist to induce cardiac hypertrophy and failure. Results are useful for the analysis of heart-related traits in mice
Genetic Dissection of Cardiac Remodeling in an Isoproterenol-Induced Heart Failure Mouse Model.
Sex, Specimen part
View SamplesNucleosome structure and positioning play pivotal roles in gene regulation, DNA repair and other essential processes in eukaryotic cells. Nucleosomal DNA is thought to be uniformly inaccessible to DNA binding and processing factors, such as MNase. Here, we show, however, that nucleosome accessibility and sensitivity to MNase varies. Digestion of Drosophila chromatin with two distinct concentrations of MNase revealed two types of nucleosomes: sensitive and resistant. MNase-resistant nucleosome arrays are less accessible to low concentrations of MNase, whereas MNase-sensitive arrays are degraded by high concentrations. MNase-resistant nucleosomes assemble on sequences depleted of A/T and enriched in G/C containing dinucleotides. In contrast, MNase-sensitive nucleosomes form on A/T rich sequences represented by transcription start and termination sites, enhancers and DNase hypersensitive sites. Lowering of cell growth temperature to ~10°C stabilizes MNase-sensitive nucleosomes suggesting that variations in sensitivity to MNase are related to either thermal fluctuations in chromatin fiber or the activity of enzymatic machinery. In the vicinity of active genes and DNase hypersensitive sites nucleosomes are organized into synchronous, periodic arrays. These patterns are likely to be caused by “phasing” nucleosomes off a potential barrier formed by DNA-bound factors and we provide an extensive biophysical framework to explain this effect. Overall design: RNA-seq S2 cells Drosophila melanogaster
Genome-wide profiling of nucleosome sensitivity and chromatin accessibility in Drosophila melanogaster.
Specimen part, Subject
View SamplesAnalysis of gene-probe expression data (FPKM) for mouse skin using single-end read RNA-seq Overall design: RNA was collected and analyzed for 2 biological replicates each from 3 developmental stages (E18.5, P3, 10 weeks)
RNA-seq studies reveal new insights into p63 and the transcriptomic landscape of the mouse skin.
No sample metadata fields
View SamplesWe developed a Tet-inducible system to express deltaNp63alpha isoform under the control of keratin 5 promoter. Transgenic mice, which were Bigenic (BG) developed a severe skin phenotype with abnormal keratinocyte differentiation and defects in hair follicle development and cycling. Skin samples from transgenic animals and wild type animals were analyzed for global transcriptome changes.
Abnormal hair follicle development and altered cell fate of follicular keratinocytes in transgenic mice expressing DeltaNp63alpha.
Specimen part
View SamplesTo define target genes of the intestine-restricted transcription factor (TF) CDX2 in intestinal stem cells, we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with high-throughput sequencing (ChIP-Seq). We used RNA-sequencing to profile gene expression changes during cell differentiation from mouse intestinal stem cells to mature villus cells, as well as genes perturbed in intestinal stem cells upon loss of Cdx2. We find thousands of genes that change in expression during cell differentiation, including known stem cell and mature markers. Upon loss of Cdx2, hundreds of genes are up and down-regulated in intestinal stem cells, some of which are also bound by CDX2 nearby and constitute candidate direct target genes. Overall design: CDX2 ChIP-Seq analysis of isolated mouse intestinal stem cells. RNA seq analysis of control mouse villus cells, control intestinal stem cells and Cdx2-deleted intestinal stem cells.
Distinct Processes and Transcriptional Targets Underlie CDX2 Requirements in Intestinal Stem Cells and Differentiated Villus Cells.
No sample metadata fields
View SamplesPurpose: To analyze cardiac fibroblasts gene expression at different time following induction of osteogenic differentiation Methods: Freshly isolated cardiac fibroblasts (Passage 0 or passage 1) were plated at a density of 2.5 x 104 cells/cm2 in growth medium. After overnight incubation, osteogenesis was induced using differentiation medium (a-MEM supplemented with 10% FBS, 10 nM dexamethasone (Sigma, D4902), 20 mM ß-glycerol phosphate (Sigma, G9422), and 50 µM L-ascorbic acid (Sigma, A4403). Cardiac fibroblasts harvested at Day0 (before differentiation medium treatment), Day7, Day14 and Day21 were used for RNA sequencing. Results: Cardiac fibroblasts harvested at different time points following induction of differentiation revealed clusters of genes whose expression was significantly altered in a temporal specific manner. Genes regulating cell cycle that were highly expressed in undifferentiated cardiac fibroblasts were down-regulated at the onset of differentiation and remained at low expression levels throughout the duration of osteogenic differentiation, consistent with the principle that induction of differentiation is associated with reduced rates of proliferation. In contrast, genes that were minimally expressed in cardiac fibroblasts were induced in a specific temporal manner during the course of osteogenic differentiation and included sets of genes known to regulate inflammation, extracellular matrix proteins and cell metabolism. Conclusions: Cardiac fibroblasts subjected to osteogenic differentiation progressively adopted an osteogenic signature. Overall design: Cardiac fibroblasts harvested at Day0 (before differentiation medium treatment), Day7, Day14 and Day21 were used for RNA sequencing. 2 samples / each time point.
Cardiac Fibroblasts Adopt Osteogenic Fates and Can Be Targeted to Attenuate Pathological Heart Calcification.
Age, Specimen part, Cell line, Treatment, Subject, Time
View SamplesThis SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
Intestinal master transcription factor CDX2 controls chromatin access for partner transcription factor binding.
Specimen part
View SamplesAnalysis of gene expression changes during mouse salivary gland development using RNA-Seq Overall design: RNA was collected and analyzed for at least two biological replicates each from six developmental timepoints (E14.5, E16.5, E18.5, P5, 4 weeks, 12 weeks)
RNA-seq based transcriptomic map reveals new insights into mouse salivary gland development and maturation.
Age, Specimen part, Cell line, Subject
View SamplesWe established whether partner transcription factor binding, chromatin structure, or gene expression is compromised upon loss of partner factors cdx2 or hnf4a in mouse intestinal villi
Intestinal master transcription factor CDX2 controls chromatin access for partner transcription factor binding.
Specimen part
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