Project description:Intra-specific polymorphism in copy number is documented in many organisms, including human and chimpanzee, but very little is known for other great apes. This study aims to provide CNVs data for orangutan, gorilla, bonobo and chimpanzee, and compare the CNV patterns among these species, as well as with human CNVs and segmental duplications from public databases.
2011-08-03 | GSE30559 | GEO
Project description:Chimpanzee and bonobo metagenomes
Project description:Single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) was used to profile the transcriptome of 9,887 nuclei in bonobo adult testis. This dataset includes two samples from two different individuals. This dataset is part of a larger evolutionary study of adult testis at the single-nucleus level (97,521 single-nuclei in total) across mammals including 10 representatives of the three main mammalian lineages: human, chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla, gibbon, rhesus macaque, marmoset, mouse (placental mammals); grey short-tailed opossum (marsupials); and platypus (egg-laying monotremes). Corresponding data were generated for a bird (red junglefowl, the progenitor of domestic chicken), to be used as an evolutionary outgroup.
Project description:Single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) was used to profile the transcriptome of 12,352 nuclei in chimpanzee adult testis. This dataset includes three samples from three different individuals. This dataset is part of a larger evolutionary study of adult testis at the single-nucleus level (97,521 single-nuclei in total) across mammals including 10 representatives of the three main mammalian lineages: human, chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla, gibbon, rhesus macaque, marmoset, mouse (placental mammals); grey short-tailed opossum (marsupials); and platypus (egg-laying monotremes). Corresponding data were generated for a bird (red junglefowl, the progenitor of domestic chicken), to be used as an evolutionary outgroup.
Project description:Intra-specific polymorphism in copy number is documented in many organisms, including human and chimpanzee, but very little is known for other great apes. This study aims to provide CNVs data for orangutan, gorilla, bonobo and chimpanzee, and compare the CNV patterns among these species, as well as with human CNVs and segmental duplications from public databases. Each sample is hybridized against a common reference of the same species for two dye combinations (e.g. chimp1_CY5 vs chimpREF_Cy3; chimp1_CY3 vs chimpREF_Cy5; bonobo1_CY5 vs bonoboREF_Cy3; bonobo1_CY3 vs bonoboREF_Cy5;)
Project description:RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) was used to annotate chimpanzee, gorilla, gibbon, and marmoset genome and transcript isoforms in adult testis. This dataset is part of a larger evolutionary study of adult testis at the single-nucleus level (97,521 single-nuclei in total) across mammals including 10 representatives of the three main mammalian lineages: human, chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla, gibbon, rhesus macaque, marmoset, mouse (placental mammals); grey short-tailed opossum (marsupials); and platypus (egg-laying monotremes). Corresponding data were generated for a bird (red junglefowl, the progenitor of domestic chicken), to be used as an evolutionary outgroup.
Project description:RNA-Seq from lymphoblastoid cell lines for Gorilla, chimpanzee and bonobo species. This RNA-Seq data has been described in the following article: Scally et al., Nature 2012;483;7388;169-75, DOI: 10.1038/nature10842, and its further analysis can be freely submitted for publication. For information on the proper use of data shared by the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute (including information on acknowledgement), please see http://www.sanger.ac.uk/datasharing/>