PLX153432
GSE124846: Astrocyte molecular signatures during Huntingtons disease progression and following huntingtin lowering with zinc finger protein transcriptional repressors
- Organsim mouse
- Type RNASEQ
- Target gene
- Project ARCHS4
The Khakh laboratory used gfaABC1D-RiboTag AAVs to purify and sequence astrocyte actively translated mRNAs from Huntington's disease mouse models at several stages of the disease. Two weeks after AAV injection, striata were homogenized and RNA was purified from (i) cleared lysate as the input and control, and (ii) astrocyte-specific ribosome-associated RNA precipitated via a hemagglutinin (HA) tag.; ; R6/2 mice are a fast developing model of Huntington's disease. Striatal cells show mutant HTT inclusions as early as 4 weeks of age. These mice show the first motor and cognitive symptoms around that age, but they become more evident around 8 week old and progressively impair until the mouse death that occurs around 13 weeks of age. Motor symptoms include increased paw clasping and grooming, impaired grip strength and rotarod performance, gait alterations, involuntary movements, etc. Cognitive impairment includes defects in learning and memory.; ; NCAR mice are the healthy "non-carrier" controls for R6/2. They don't have unexpected phenotypes. SOURCE: Giovanni Coppola (gcoppola@ucla.edu) - Neurogenetics UCLA
View on GEOView in PlutoKey Features
Enhance your research with our curated data sets and powerful platform features. Pluto Bio makes it simple to find and use the data you need.
Learn MoreAnalyze and visualize data for this experiment
Use Pluto's intuitive interface to analyze and visualize data for this experiment. Pluto's platform is equipped with an API & SDKs, making it easy to integrate into your internal bioinformatics processes.
Read about post-pipeline analysisView QC data and experiment metadata
View quality control data and experiment metadata for this experiment.
Request import of other GEO data
Request imports from GEO or TCGA directly within Pluto Bio.
Chat with our Scientific Insights team