Project description:The goal was to obtain the differential transcriptome in the deep cones between shallow and deep wounds and between the Yorkshire and Duroc breeds over time. We made shallow and deep wounds on the backs of 3 Yorkshire and 3 Duroc pigs, biopsied the wounds at 1 2 3 12 and 20 weeks, extracted and amplified the RNA from the deep cones, and hybridized the Affymetrix GeneChip®. We compared wound depth by breed over time; the system included 3 factors (depth, breed and time). The system also included repeated measures since the same pigs were used at each time. It also included paired data since the shallow and deep wounds compared were located on the same pig.
Project description:Contain data of 2 studies
1: 82 nodal stage 1 FL cases and 139 stage III/IV cases
2: 44 watch and wait stage III/IV and 46 Immediate treatment stage III/IV
targeted sequencing data of 369 genes and 12 translocation regions
whole genome shallow sequencing data
Project description:We performed shallow whole genome sequencing (WGS) on circulating free (cf)DNA extracted from plasma or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and shallow WGS on the tissue DNA extracted from the biopsy in order to evaluate the correlation between the two biomaterials. After library construction and sequencing (Hiseq3000 or Ion Proton), copy number variations were called with WisecondorX.
Project description:Most current methods to identify cell-specific RNA binding protein (RBP) targets require analyzing an extract, a strategy that is problematic with small amounts of material. We previously addressed this issue by developing TRIBE, a method that expresses an RBP of interest fused to the catalytic domain (cd) of the RNA editing enzyme ADAR. TRIBE performs Adenosine-to-Inosine editing on candidate RNA targets of the RBP. However, target identification is limited by the efficiency of the ADARcd. Here we describe HyperTRIBE, which carries a previously characterized hyperactive mutation (E488Q) of the ADARcd. HyperTRIBE identifies dramatically more editing sites than TRIBE, many of which are also edited by TRIBE but at a much lower editing frequency. The data have mechanistic implications for the enhanced editing activity of the HyperADARcd as part of a RBP fusion protein and also indicate that HyperTRIBE more faithfully recapitulates the known binding specificity of its RBP than TRIBE.