PLX009406
GSE125483: Conservation, acquisition, and functional impact of sex-biased gene expression in mammalian tissues
- Organsim mouse
- Type RNASEQ
- Target gene
- Project ARCHS4
Sex differences are widespread in human health and disease, which are frequently modeled in other mammalian species. However, the extent to which molecular sex differences are conserved across both tissues and species remains unclear. We conducted a 12-tissue, five-species survey of sex differences in gene expression using both publicly available (human) and newly generated (cynomolgus macaque, mouse, rat, and dog) RNA sequencing data. In each of the tissues assessed, we identified between 128 and 805 genes with conserved sex-biased expression. However, most sex bias in gene expression (~77%) both female and male has arisen since the last common ancestor of boroeutherian mammals, likely facilitated by reduced selective constraint. Evolutionary gains and losses of regulation by sex-biased transcription factors drove a significant fraction (~27%) of lineage-specific changes in sex bias. Our study suggests caution in the use of other species as models of human sex differences, and that similar selective pressures have driven sex-biased gene expression both within and outside the reproductive tract. SOURCE: Sahin Naqvi (sahin.naqvi@gmail.com) - Page Whitehead Institute
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