U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination
Accession: PRJNA141093 ID: 141093

Homo sapiens (human)

An early inflammatory gene profile in visceral adipose tissue in children

See Genome Information for Homo sapiens
The aim of this study was to characterize expression profiles of visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissue in children. Adipose tissue samples were collected from children having elective surgery (n=71, [54 boys], 6.0 +- 4.3 years). Affymetrix microarrays (n=20) were performed to characterize the functional profile and identify genes of interest in adipose tissue. Visceral adipose tissue had an overrepresentation of Gene Ontology themes related to immune and inflammatory responses and subcutaneous adipose tissue had an overrepresentation of themes related to adipocyte growth and development. Likewise, qPCR performed in the whole cohort showed a 30-fold increase in haptoglobin (P < 0.005), 7-fold increase in IL-10 (P < 0.001), 8-fold decrease in VEGF (P < 0.01) and a 28-fold decrease in TBOX15 (P < 0.001) in visceral compared to subcutaneous adipose tissue.The inflammatory pattern in visceral adipose tissue may represent an early stage of the adverse effects of this depot, and combined with chronic obesity, may contribute to increased metabolic and cardiovascular risk. Overall design: 20 human samples from pre-pubertal boys and girls were assessed for differences in expression between subcutaneous (n=15) and visceral fat (n=5), with 1 microarray per subject
AccessionPRJNA141093; GEO: GSE29718
Data TypeTranscriptome or Gene expression
ScopeMultiisolate
OrganismHomo sapiens[Taxonomy ID: 9606]
Eukaryota; Metazoa; Chordata; Craniata; Vertebrata; Euteleostomi; Mammalia; Eutheria; Euarchontoglires; Primates; Haplorrhini; Catarrhini; Hominidae; Homo; Homo sapiens
PublicationsTam CS et al., "An early inflammatory gene profile in visceral adipose tissue in children.", Int J Pediatr Obes, 2011 Jun;6(2-2):e360-3
SubmissionRegistration date: 4-Jun-2011
Dinger lab, Genome Informatics & Clinical Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research
RelevanceMedical
Project Data:
Resource NameNumber
of Links
Publications
PubMed1
PMC1
Other datasets
GEO DataSets2
GEO Data Details
ParameterValue
Data volume, Spots665940
Data volume, Processed Mbytes11
Data volume, Supplementary Mbytes80

Supplemental Content

Recent activity

  • Homo sapiens
    Homo sapiens
    An early inflammatory gene profile in visceral adipose tissue in children
    BioProject

Your browsing activity is empty.

Activity recording is turned off.

Turn recording back on

See more...
Support Center