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HT Experiment :

Experiment Id  E-GEOD-54650 Series Id  GSE54650
Name  A circadian gene expression atlas in mammals assayed by microarray Experiment Type  transcription profiling by array
Study Type  Baseline Source  ArrayExpress
Curation Date  2018-01-25
description  To characterize the role of the circadian clock in mouse physiology and behavior, we used RNA-seq and DNA arrays to quantify the transcriptomes of 12 mouse organs over time. We found 43% of all protein coding genes showed circadian rhythms in transcription somewhere in the body, largely in an organ-specific manner. In most organs, we noticed the expression of many oscillating genes peaked during transcriptional "rush hours" preceding dawn and dusk. Looking at the genomic landscape of rhythmic genes, we saw that they clustered together, were longer, and had more splice forms than nonoscillating genes. Systems-level analysis revealed intricate rhythmic orchestration of gene pathways throughout the body. We also found oscillations in the expression of more than 1,000 known and novel noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs). Supporting their potential role in mediating clock function, ncRNAs conserved between mouse and human showed rhythmic expression in similar proportions as protein coding genes. Importantly, we also found that the majority of best-selling drugs and World Health Organization essential medicines directly target the products of rhythmic genes. Many of these drugs have short half-lives and may benefit from timed dosage. In sum, this study highlights critical, systemic, and surprising roles of the mammalian circadian clock and provides a blueprint for advancement in chronotherapy. 288 samples total covering 12 different tissues, with no replicates. Each tissue sampled every 2 hours for 2 days (24 samples per tissue).
  • variables:
  • anatomical structure,
  • time of day

1 Publications

Trail: HTExperiment

288 Samples

Trail: HTExperiment