List of positional candidate genes after correcting for multiple testing and controlling the false discovery rate from genome wide association studies (GWAS) retrieved from the NHGRI-EBI Catalog of published genome-wide association studies (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gwas/). The disease/trait examined in this study, as reported by the authors, was Cannabis use. The EFO term Cannabis use was annotated to this set after curation by NHGRI-EBI. Intergenic SNPS were mapped to both the upstream and downstream gene. P-value uploaded. This gene set was generated using gwas2gs v. 0.1.8 and the GWAS Catalog v. 1.0.1.
Authors:
S Stringer, CC Minică, KJ Verweij, H Mbarek, M Bernard, J Derringer, KR van Eijk, JD Isen, A Loukola, DF Maciejewski, E Mihailov, PJ van der Most, C Sánchez-Mora, L Roos, R Sherva, R Walters, JJ Ware, A Abdellaoui, TB Bigdeli, SJ Branje, SA Brown, M Bruinenberg, M Casas, T Esko, I Garcia-Martinez, SD Gordon, JM Harris, CA Hartman, AK Henders, AC Heath, IB Hickie, M Hickman, CJ Hopfer, JJ Hottenga, AC Huizink, DE Irons, RS Kahn, T Korhonen, HR Kranzler, K Krauter, PA van Lier, GH Lubke, PA Madden, R Mägi, MK McGue, SE Medland, WH Meeus, MB Miller, GW Montgomery, MG Nivard, IM Nolte, AJ Oldehinkel, Z Pausova, B Qaiser, L Quaye, JA Ramos-Quiroga, V Richarte, RJ Rose, J Shin, MC Stallings, AI Stiby, TL Wall, MJ Wright, HM Koot, T Paus, JK Hewitt, M Ribasés, J Kaprio, MP Boks, H Snieder, T Spector, MR Munafò, A Metspalu, J Gelernter, DI Boomsma, WG Iacono, NG Martin, NA Gillespie, EM Derks, JM Vink
GCM_NCAM1
Neighborhood of NCAM1
c4 - Computational genesets defined by mining large collections of cancer-oriented microarray data.
Molecular Signatures Database (MSigDB) Geneset. This geneset was imported from one of the MSigDB collections.
gene2msig v. 0.1.0
Last updated 2015.08.31
GWAS: cardiovascular measurement, left ventricular hypertrophy
Description:
List of positional candidate genes after correcting for multiple testing and controlling the false discovery rate from genome wide association studies (GWAS) retrieved from the NHGRI-EBI Catalog of published genome-wide association studies (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gwas/). The disease/trait examined in this study, as reported by the authors, was Cardiac muscle measurement. The EFO term cardiovascular measurement, left ventricular hypertrophy was annotated to this set after curation by NHGRI-EBI. Intergenic SNPS were mapped to both the upstream and downstream gene. P-value uploaded. This gene set was generated using gwas2gs v. 0.1.8 and the GWAS Catalog v. 1.0.1.
Authors:
DK Arnett, KJ Meyers, RB Devereux, HK Tiwari, CC Gu, LK Vaughan, RT Perry, A Patki, SA Claas, YV Sun, U Broeckel, SL Kardia
The processes, properties and biological objects that are involved in maintaining, expressing, and transmitting from one organism to another, genetically encoded traits.
Generated by gene2mesh v. 1.1.1
The regular and simultaneous occurrence in a single interbreeding population of two or more discontinuous genotypes. The concept includes differences in genotypes ranging in size from a single nucleotide site (POLYMORPHISM, SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE) to large nucleotide sequences visible at a chromosomal level.
Generated by gene2mesh v. 1.1.1
The total transcriptome including genes that are differentially expressed in cocaine addicts compared to control subjects. Post-mortem brain samples were collected from the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) of the cocaine addict group and the control group. To assess gene expression, RNA-seq was performed. Data taken from Supplementary Table 2. Values presented are k.diff values. Data available from GEO with accession number GSE99349."
Authors:
Efrain A Ribeiro, Joseph R Scarpa, Susanna P Garamszegi, Andrew Kasarskis, Deborah C Mash, Eric J Nestler
Differentially expressed genes from Neovascular AMD compared to Normal RPE
Description:
Transcriptome profiling from macular retina and RPE/choroid samples from 27 unrelated eye tissue donors, was performed using RNA-sequencing. Human donor eye collection were obtained from Utah Lions Eye Bank within a 6-hour post-mortem interval and donors aged 60-90 years. Sample types were Normal Retina, Intermediate AMD Retina, Neovascular AMD Retina, Normal macular retina pigment epithelium (RPE), Intermediate AMD RPE, and Neovascular AMD RPE. Age Related Macular Degeneration (AMD) phenotyping was determined using the Age-Related Eye Disease Study (AREDS) severity grading scale, where AREDS category 0/1 was considered normal, AREDS category 3 intermediate AMD, and AREDS category 4b neovascular AMD. Samples from Neovascular AMD (AREDS3) macular retina pigment epithelium (RPE) compared to Normal RPE, and are presented with fold change > 1.5 and and P < 0.05. This gene set was annotated from the Supplementry Table of BioRxiv pre-print paper ‘Patterns of gene expression and allele-specific expression vary among macular tissues and clinical stages of Age-related Macular Degeneration’ by Zhang et.al (2022) doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.12.19.521092
Data from GEO GSE194368 and analyzed using GEO2R, only top gene shown. Authors identified transcriptional adaptations of GR signaling in the amygdala of humans with OUD. Thus, GRs, their coregulators and downstream systems may represent viable therapeutic targets to treat the “stress side” of OUD.
Authors:
Stephanie A Carmack, Janaina C M Vendruscolo, M Adrienne McGinn, Jorge Miranda-Barrientos, Vez Repunte-Canonigo, Gabriel D Bosse, Daniele Mercatelli, Federico M Giorgi, Yu Fu, Anthony J Hinrich, Francine M Jodelka, Karen Ling, Robert O Messing, Randall T Peterson, Frank Rigo, Scott Edwards, Pietro P Sanna, Marisela Morales, Michelle L Hastings, George F Koob, Leandro F Vendruscolo
Differential gene expression between CS14 and CS17 - Log2FC
Description:
Human craniofacial tissues were collected from the Joint MRC/Wellcome Trust Human Developmental Biology (HDBR). Donations of tissue to HDBR are made under-informed ethical consent with Research Tissue Bank ethical approval by women undergoing termination of pregnancy. Gene expression profiles were generated from multiple biological replicates of primary craniofacial (CF) tissue from Carnegie Stages (CS) of the embryonic period, CS13, CS14, CS17, CS17, and CS22. Here the differential expression comparison between CS14 and CS17 is shown. Gene expressions values with log to the base 2, FC are presented with P-Adj <0.05. UBERON:0015789, cranial or facial muscle.
Authors:
Tara N Yankee, Sungryong Oh, Emma Wentworth Winchester, Andrea Wilderman, Kelsey Robinson, Tia Gordon, Jill A Rosenfeld, Jennifer VanOudenhove, Daryl A Scott, Elizabeth J Leslie, Justin Cotney
Differential gene expression between CS14 and CS17 - Adj-P value
Description:
Human craniofacial tissues were collected from the Joint MRC/Wellcome Trust Human Developmental Biology (HDBR). Donations of tissue to HDBR are made under-informed ethical consent with Research Tissue Bank ethical approval by women undergoing termination of pregnancy. Gene expression profiles were generated from multiple biological replicates of primary craniofacial (CF) tissue from Carnegie Stages (CS) of the embryonic period, CS13, CS14, CS15, CS17 and CS22. Here the differential expression comparison between CS14 and CS17 is shown. Gene expressions values, Ensembl Gene ids and the corresponding Adjusted P value are presented. UBERON:0015789, cranial or facial muscle.
Authors:
Tara N Yankee, Sungryong Oh, Emma Wentworth Winchester, Andrea Wilderman, Kelsey Robinson, Tia Gordon, Jill A Rosenfeld, Jennifer VanOudenhove, Daryl A Scott, Elizabeth J Leslie, Justin Cotney
Differential gene expression between CS15 and CS17 - Adj-P value
Description:
Human craniofacial tissues were collected from the Joint MRC/Wellcome Trust Human Developmental Biology (HDBR). Donations of tissue to HDBR are made under-informed ethical consent with Research Tissue Bank ethical approval by women undergoing termination of pregnancy. Gene expression profiles were generated from multiple biological replicates of primary craniofacial (CF) tissue from Carnegie Stages (CS) of the embryonic period, CS13, CS14, CS17,CS17 and CS22. Here the differential expression comparison between CS15 and CS17 is shown. Gene expressions values, Ensembl Gene ids and the corresponding Adjusted P value are presented. UBERON:0015789, cranial or facial muscle.
Authors:
Tara N Yankee, Sungryong Oh, Emma Wentworth Winchester, Andrea Wilderman, Kelsey Robinson, Tia Gordon, Jill A Rosenfeld, Jennifer VanOudenhove, Daryl A Scott, Elizabeth J Leslie, Justin Cotney
Differential gene expression between CS15 and CS22 - Adj-P value
Description:
Human craniofacial tissues were collected from the Joint MRC/Wellcome Trust Human Developmental Biology (HDBR). Donations of tissue to HDBR are made under-informed ethical consent with Research Tissue Bank ethical approval by women undergoing termination of pregnancy. Gene expression profiles were generated from multiple biological replicates of primary craniofacial (CF) tissue from Carnegie Stages (CS) of the embryonic period, CS13, CS14, CS17, CS17 and CS22. Here the differential expression comparison between CS15 and CS22 is shown. Gene expressions values, Ensembl Gene ids and the corresponding Adjusted P value are presented. UBERON:0015789, cranial or facial muscle.
Authors:
Tara N Yankee, Sungryong Oh, Emma Wentworth Winchester, Andrea Wilderman, Kelsey Robinson, Tia Gordon, Jill A Rosenfeld, Jennifer VanOudenhove, Daryl A Scott, Elizabeth J Leslie, Justin Cotney
To monitor the expression levels of a large number of genes and to identify genes not previously implicated in traumatic brain injury pathophysiology, a high-density oligonucleotide array containing 8,800 genes was interrogated. RNA samples were prepared from ipsilateral hippocampi 3 hr and 24 hr following lateral cortical impact injury and compared to samples from sham-operated controls.
Authors:
Matzilevich DA, Rall JM, Moore AN, Grill RJ, Dash PK
Affymetrix oligonucleotide arrays to assess gene expression in brains of mice selectively bred for differences in acute functional tolerance to an incoordinating effect of ethanol (HAFT mice, high acute functional tolerance; LAFT mice, low acute functional tolerance)
Affymetrix oligonucleotide arrays to assess gene expression in brains of mice selectively bred for differences in acute functional tolerance to an incoordinating effect of ethanol (HAFT mice, high acute functional tolerance; LAFT mice, low acute functional tolerance)
Gene set has 67 genes associated with nicotine abstinence. Backgound: In this study, genome-wide association studies are conducted for two human cohorts, one group demonstrating nicotine dependence, and another that successfully quit smoking. The study shows that some genetic components associated with ability to quit overlap while many do not. To perform the study, DNA samples were obtained from NIH volunteers and allelic frequencies of the samples were analyzed using Affymetrix array analysis. Table S2.
Authors:
Drgon T, Montoya I, Johnson C, Liu QR, Walther D, Hamer D, Uhl GR
Study integrated five different ethanol-associated QTL (chr1, chr2, chr4, chr9 or chr19) and gene expression data of C57BL/6 (B6) and DBA/2 (D2) inbred mouse strains with the goal of accelerating movement from QTLs to the QTGs (Quantitative Trait Gene). This gene set contains 28 genes that showed greater expression in D2 than in B6 mice when Microarray Mouse Expression Array 430A analysis was used.
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