A. I. Su, T. Wiltshire, S. Batalov, H. Lapp, K. A. Ching, D. Block, J. Zhang, R. Soden, M.Hayakawa, G. Kreiman, M. P. Cooke, J. R. Walker and J. B. Hogenesch
A gene atlas of the mouse and human protein-encoding transcriptomes
PNAS 101: 6062-6067 (2004) PDF
The tissue-specific
pattern of mRNA expression can indicate important clues about gene function.
High-density oligonucleotide arrays offer the opportunity to examine patterns
of gene expression on a genome scale. Toward this end, we have designed custom
arrays that interrogate the expression of the vast majority of protein-encoding
human and mouse genes and have used them to profile a panel of 79 human and
61 mouse tissues. The resulting data set provides the expression patterns
for thousands of predicted genes, as well as known and poorly characterized
genes, from mice and humans. We have explored this data set for global trends
in gene expression, evaluated commonly used lines of evidence in gene prediction
methodologies, and investigated patterns indicative of chromosomal organization
of transcription. We describe hundreds of regions of correlated transcription
and show that some are subject to both tissue and parental allele-specific
expression, suggesting a link between spatial expression and imprinting.
| Department of Ophthalmology | ![]() |
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| Program in Neurobiology | ||
| Children's Hospital Harvard Medical School | ||
| Center for Brain Science, Harvard University | ||
| Swartz Center for Theoretical Neuroscience |
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