Mahmoud Ahmed

Postdoc - Cancer Genomics

Tissue-specific gene expression in obese hyperglycemic mice


Journal article


Mahmoud Ahmed, Omar Elashkar, Jong Youl Lee, Eun Ae Jeong, Kyung Eun Kim, Gu Seob Roh, Deok Ryong Kim
All Life, vol. 15(1), Taylor & Francis, 2022, pp. 555-561


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APA   Click to copy
Ahmed, M., Elashkar, O., Lee, J. Y., Jeong, E. A., Kim, K. E., Roh, G. S., & Kim, D. R. (2022). Tissue-specific gene expression in obese hyperglycemic mice. All Life, 15(1), 555–561. https://doi.org/10.1080/26895293.2022.2078896


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Ahmed, Mahmoud, Omar Elashkar, Jong Youl Lee, Eun Ae Jeong, Kyung Eun Kim, Gu Seob Roh, and Deok Ryong Kim. “Tissue-Specific Gene Expression in Obese Hyperglycemic Mice.” All Life 15, no. 1 (2022): 555–561.


MLA   Click to copy
Ahmed, Mahmoud, et al. “Tissue-Specific Gene Expression in Obese Hyperglycemic Mice.” All Life, vol. 15, no. 1, Taylor & Francis, 2022, pp. 555–61, doi:10.1080/26895293.2022.2078896.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{ahmed2022a,
  title = {Tissue-specific gene expression in obese hyperglycemic mice},
  year = {2022},
  issue = {1},
  journal = {All Life},
  pages = {555-561},
  publisher = {Taylor & Francis},
  volume = {15},
  doi = {10.1080/26895293.2022.2078896},
  author = {Ahmed, Mahmoud and Elashkar, Omar and Lee, Jong Youl and Jeong, Eun Ae and Kim, Kyung Eun and Roh, Gu Seob and Kim, Deok Ryong}
}

Abstract

Ob/ob mice are leptin-deficient animals with uninhibited food intake and susceptibility to gain weight and develop type 2 diabetes. The mice have been used to study obesity and diabetes. We generated a dataset of different tissue gene expressions from wild-type and ob/ob mice with a normal diet (ND) or high-fat diet (HFD). The gene expression was profiled at a genome-scale using RNA-seq. We deposited the raw data to the short read archive and the processed data to the gene expression omnibus. In this manuscript, we describe generating the dataset and technical validation of the gene expression profiles. We assessed the quality of the reads, alignment, and the quantification of gene expression. We found that the tissue of origin explained the most variance between samples. Non-coding features differed in their contribution to the mice profiles. Gene expression profiles diverged between the experimental groups. To sum, this dataset can be used to study tissue-specific gene expression in weight gain susceptible mice and the response to HFD.


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