Publication: A Resource for Transcriptomic Analysis in the Mouse Brain
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Date
2008-08-20
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Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Citation
Plessy, Charles, Michela Fagiolini, Akiko Wagatsuma, Norihiro Harasawa, Takenobu Kuji, Atsuko Asaka-Oba, Yukari Kanzaki, et al. 2008. “A Resource for Transcriptomic Analysis in the Mouse Brain.” Edited by Laszlo Orban. PLoS ONE 3 (8) (August 20): e3012. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0003012.
Research Data
Abstract
Background: The transcriptome of the cerebral cortex is remarkably homogeneous, with variations being stronger between
individuals than between areas. It is thought that due to the presence of many distinct cell types, differences within one cell
population will be averaged with the noise from others. Studies of sorted cells expressing the same transgene have shown
that cell populations can be distinguished according to their transcriptional profile.
Methodology: We have prepared a low-redundancy set of 16,209 full-length cDNA clones which represents the
transcriptome of the mouse visual cortex in its coding and non-coding aspects. Using an independent tag-based approach,
CAGE, we confirmed the cortical expression of 72% of the clones. Clones were amplified by PCR and spotted on glass slides,
and we interrogated the microarrays with RNA from flow-sorted fluorescent cells from the cerebral cortex of parvalbuminegfp
transgenic mice.
Conclusions: We provide an annotated cDNA clone collection which is particularly suitable for transcriptomic analysis in the
mouse brain. Spotting it on microarrays, we compared the transcriptome of EGFP positive and negative cells in a
parvalbumin-egfp transgenic background and showed that more than 30% of clones are differentially expressed. Our clone
collection will be a useful resource for the study of the transcriptome of single cell types in the cerebral cortex.
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Multidisciplinary