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Items: 1 to 20 of 1378

1.

CFTR Represses a PDX1 Axis to Govern Pancreatic Ductal Cell Fate [scRNA-seq]

(Submitter supplied) Inflammation, acinar cell destruction, and ductal cell hyperplasia drive pancreatic remodeling in newborns with cystic fibrosis (CF) lacking a functional CFTR channel. In neonatal CF ferrets, these changes are associated with a transient phase of glucose intolerance that involves islet destruction and subsequent regeneration near hyperplastic ducts. Little is known about the phenotypic changes in CF ductal epithelium and its potential impact on islet function. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL28629
8 Samples
Download data: CSV, MTX, TSV
Series
Accession:
GSE264022
ID:
200264022
2.

CFTR Represses a PDX1 Axis to Govern Pancreatic Ductal Cell Fate [Bulk ATAC-seq]

(Submitter supplied) Inflammation, acinar cell destruction, and ductal cell hyperplasia drive pancreatic remodeling in newborns with cystic fibrosis (CF) lacking a functional CFTR channel. In neonatal CF ferrets, these changes are associated with a transient phase of glucose intolerance that involves islet destruction and subsequent regeneration near hyperplastic ducts. Little is known about the phenotypic changes in CF ductal epithelium and its potential impact on islet function. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Genome binding/occupancy profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL34388
7 Samples
Download data: BED
Series
Accession:
GSE264021
ID:
200264021
3.

CFTR Represses a PDX1 Axis to Govern Pancreatic Ductal Cell Fate [Bulk RNA-seq]

(Submitter supplied) Inflammation, acinar cell destruction, and ductal cell hyperplasia drive pancreatic remodeling in newborns with cystic fibrosis (CF) lacking a functional CFTR channel. In neonatal CF ferrets, these changes are associated with a transient phase of glucose intolerance that involves islet destruction and subsequent regeneration near hyperplastic ducts. Little is known about the phenotypic changes in CF ductal epithelium and its potential impact on islet function. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL34388
6 Samples
Download data: CSV
Series
Accession:
GSE264019
ID:
200264019
4.

Genetic diversity accelerates canine distemper virus adaptation to ferrets

(Submitter supplied) RNA viruses adapt rapidly to new host environments by generating highly diverse genome sets, so-called “quasispecies”. Minor genetic variants promote their rapid adaptation allowing for emergence of drug-resistance or immune-escape mutants. Understanding these adaptation processes is highly relevant to assess the risk of cross-species transmission, and safety and efficacy of vaccines and antivirals. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo; Chlorocebus sabaeus; canine distemper virus
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platforms:
GPL34630 GPL34629
9 Samples
Download data: FASTA, WIG
Series
Accession:
GSE270448
ID:
200270448
5.

Gene regulatory landscape of cerebral cortex folding

(Submitter supplied) Our brains accommodate a largely folded cerebral cortex that associates to our advanced brain functions. Several theories have been proposed to explain the cortical folding process, reasoning the mechanical forces as neuronal tension in underlying layers, cellular expansion and glial progenitor’s diversity in the OSVZ; but the mechanistic insights and underlying genomics changes causing the appearance of cortical folds is still illusive. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing; Genome binding/occupancy profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platforms:
GPL25735 GPL28629 GPL28369
49 Samples
Download data: CSV, H5AD, MTX
Series
Accession:
GSE172289
ID:
200172289
6.

Multiple parallel cell lineages in the developing mammalian cerebral cortex

(Submitter supplied) Cortical neurogenesis follows a simple lineage: apical Radial Glia Cells (RGC) generate basal progenitors, and these produce neurons. How this occurs in species with expanded germinal zones and a folded cortex, like human, remains unclear. We used single-cell RNA sequencing from individual cortical germinal zones in ferret, and barcoded lineage tracking, to determine the molecular diversity of progenitor cells and their lineages. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo; Mustela putorius
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platforms:
GPL32908 GPL28629
26 Samples
Download data: MTX, TSV
Series
Accession:
GSE234305
ID:
200234305
7.

Barcode lineage tracking of ferret cortical progeny using TrackerSeq (Mayer lab)

(Submitter supplied) Diversity of cortical radial glia cells (RGCs) and their complex relationships to generate neurons in species with expanded germinal zones and a folded cortex, remains unclear. We used TrackerSeq, a technique that integrates DNA barcodes into the genome of electroporated RGCs, to identify the distinct cell lineages that shape ferret cortex.
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL28629
8 Samples
Download data: CSV, MTX, TSV
Series
Accession:
GSE233587
ID:
200233587
8.

Evolution of neuronal cell classes and types in the vertebrate retina

(Submitter supplied) This SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo; Bos taurus; Anolis sagrei; Ictidomys tridecemlineatus; Danio rerio; Didelphis marsupialis; Peromyscus maniculatus; Tupaia chinensis; Callithrix jacchus; Ovis aries; Homo sapiens; Sus scrofa domesticus; Rhabdomys pumilio
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
13 related Platforms
118 Samples
Download data
Series
Accession:
GSE237215
ID:
200237215
9.

Evolution of neuronal cell classes and types in the vertebrate retina [ferret]

(Submitter supplied) The basic plan of the retina is conserved across vertebrates, yet species differ profoundly in their visual needs (Baden et al., 2020). One might expect that retinal cell types evolved to accommodate these varied needs, but this has not been systematically studied. Here, we generated and integrated single-cell transcriptomic atlases of the retina from 17 species: humans, two non-human primates, four rodents, three ungulates, opossum, ferret, tree shrew, a teleost fish, a bird, a reptile and a lamprey. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL28629
8 Samples
Download data: CSV
Series
Accession:
GSE237203
ID:
200237203
10.

Mammalian Methylation Consortium

(Submitter supplied) The Mammalian Methylation Consortium aimed to characterize the relationship between cytosine methylation levels and a) species characteristics such as maximum lifespan and b) individual sample characteristics such as age, sex, tissue type. Both supervised machine learning approaches and unsupervised machine learning approaches were applied to the data as described in the citations. To facilitate comparative analyses across species, the mammalian methylation consortium applied a single measurement platform (the mammalian methylation array, GPL28271) to n=15216 DNA samples derived from 70 tissue types of 348 different mammalian species (331 eutherian-, 15 marsupial-, and 2 monotreme species). more...
Organism:
Osphranter robustus; Bradypus variegatus; Echinops telfairi; Blarina brevicauda; Desmodus rotundus; Pan troglodytes; Lycaon pictus; Vulpes vulpes; Felis catus; Zalophus californianus; Orcinus orca; Tursiops truncatus; Balaenoptera borealis; Balaenoptera musculus; Trichechus manatus; Equus grevyi; Sus scrofa; Giraffa camelopardalis; Capra hircus; Ovis aries; Tragelaphus strepsiceros; Oryctolagus cuniculus; Marmota monax; Cricetulus griseus; Ondatra zibethicus; Acomys cahirinus; Apodemus sylvaticus; Hystrix cristata; Bathyergus janetta; Georychus capensis; Eulemur coronatus; Eulemur fulvus; Vicugna pacos; Eulemur macaco; Microcebus murinus; Chinchilla lanigera; Erethizon dorsatum; Eumetopias jubatus; Caenolestes fuliginosus; Peromyscus eremicus; Peromyscus polionotus; Eulemur fulvus collaris; Lepus californicus; Tamandua tetradactyla; Talpa occidentalis; Myotis lucifugus; Rhinolophus ferrumequinum; Arvicanthis niloticus; Sorex caecutiens; Sorex isodon; Litocranius walleri; Scalopus aquaticus; Equus asinus somalicus; Ceratotherium simum simum; Callospermophilus lateralis; Mustela altaica; Napaeozapus insignis; Apodemus peninsulae; Ochotona alpina; Scapanus orarius; Hemiechinus auritus; Orientallactaga sibirica; Rhynchonycteris naso; Gerbillus nanus; Tupaia gracilis; Sylvilagus bachmani; Alticola barakshin; Asellia tridens; Myodes rufocanus; Nothocricetulus migratorius; Didelphis virginiana; Didelphis marsupialis; Notamacropus agilis; Macropus fuliginosus; Choloepus hoffmanni; Amblysomus hottentotus; Artibeus jamaicensis; Varecia variegata; Cheirogaleus medius; Gorilla gorilla; Pongo pygmaeus; Homo sapiens; Crocuta crocuta; Phoca vitulina; Phocoena phocoena; Delphinapterus leucas; Physeter catodon; Diceros bicornis; Odocoileus virginianus; Muntiacus vaginalis; Bos taurus; Tragelaphus oryx; Sylvilagus floridanus; Peromyscus maniculatus; Microtus pennsylvanicus; Mus musculus; Cryptomys hottentotus; Hapalemur griseus; Nanger granti; Balaena mysticetus; Molossus molossus; Nycticeius humeralis; Elephantulus edwardii; Sylvilagus audubonii; Propithecus tattersalli; Nannospalax ehrenbergi; Sciurus niger; Sorex cinereus; Tupaia belangeri; Cavia aperea; Phascolarctos cinereus; Ochotona rufescens; Sorex palustris; Cabassous unicinctus; Myotis myotis; Aplodontia rufa; Pipistrellus pipistrellus; Saccopteryx bilineata; Addax nasomaculatus; Antidorcas marsupialis; Kobus megaceros; Chlorocebus sabaeus; Ctenomys opimus; Neomys fodiens; Sorex vagrans; Eidolon helvum; Pteropus rodricensis; Okapia johnstoni; Phyllostomus discolor; Lagenorhynchus obliquidens; Callospermophilus saturatus; Alexandromys fortis; Xanthonycticebus pygmaeus; Cephalorhynchus commersonii; Cuniculus paca; Myotis brandtii; Myotis nattereri; Elephantulus myurus; Rhabdomys pumilio; Pteropus vampyrus; Apodemus uralensis; Condylura cristata; Tamiasciurus douglasii; Neurotrichus gibbsii; Rhombomys opimus; Rhinolophus alcyone; Myotis evotis; Meriones rex; Hemicentetes semispinosus; Microgale cowani; Dendrohyrax arboreus; Propithecus coquereli; Hipposideros ruber; Alexandromys maximowiczii; Galea musteloides leucoblephara; Alexandromys mongolicus; Nannospalax galili; Lasiopodomys gregalis; Tachyglossus aculeatus; Sarcophilus harrisii; Macropus giganteus; Tamandua mexicana; Dasypus novemcinctus; Erinaceus europaeus; Atelerix albiventris; Sorex hoyi; Pteropus poliocephalus; Pteropus hypomelanus; Rousettus aegyptiacus; Phyllostomus hastatus; Lemur catta; Otolemur crassicaudatus; Loris tardigradus; Callithrix jacchus; Papio hamadryas; Canis lupus familiaris; Ursus americanus; Martes americana; Odobenus rosmarus divergens; Elephas maximus; Loxodonta africana; Rhinoceros unicornis; Procavia capensis; Sus scrofa domesticus; Capreolus capreolus; Cervus elaphus; Aepyceros melampus; Ochotona princeps; Peromyscus leucopus; Mus minutoides; Rattus norvegicus; Rattus rattus; Cavia porcellus; Myocastor coypus; Heterocephalus glaber; Monodelphis domestica; Choloepus didactylus; Eptesicus fuscus; Chaetophractus villosus; Vombatus ursinus; Galago moholi; Acinonyx jubatus; Dromiciops gliroides; Eulemur mongoz; Suricata suricatta; Phoca groenlandica; Ictidomys tridecemlineatus; Glaucomys sabrinus; Lepus americanus; Mesoplodon bidens; Sylvilagus nuttallii; Nyctalus noctula; Castor canadensis; Trachypithecus francoisi; Cynopterus brachyotis; Lynx rufus; Plecotus auritus; Ctenomys steinbachi; Sorex minutissimus; Sorex tundrensis; Sorex trowbridgii; Nanger dama; Tragelaphus eurycerus; Tragelaphus spekii; Gazella leptoceros; Tupaia tana; Microtus ochrogaster; Propithecus diadema; Cyclopes didactylus; Eulemur flavifrons; Equus quagga; Marmota flaviventris; Parascalops breweri; Connochaetes taurinus albojubatus; Eozapus setchuanus; Phodopus roborovskii; Eulemur sanfordi; Tamias townsendii; Rhinopoma hardwickii; Ochotona dauurica; Ochotona hyperborea; Ochotona pallasi; Cavia tschudii; Myotis thysanodes; Myotis yumanensis; Neophoca cinerea; Zapus princeps; Tolypeutes matacus; Myotis vivesi; Tupaia longipes; Paraechinus aethiopicus; Microtus guentheri; Smutsia temminckii; Mirza zaza; Alticola semicanus; Lasiopodomys brandtii; Neogale vison; Crocidura cyanea; Micaelamys namaquensis; Clethrionomys gapperi; Galeopterus variegatus; Sylvilagus brasiliensis; Cephalorhynchus hectori hectori; Cephalorhynchus hectori maui; Paraechinus hypomelas; Microgale thomasi; Cervus canadensis; Alexandromys oeconomus; Ornithorhynchus anatinus; Notamacropus eugenii; Osphranter rufus; Suncus murinus; Tadarida brasiliensis; Antrozous pallidus; Nycticebus coucang; Perodicticus potto; Macaca mulatta; Canis latrans; Mustela putorius furo; Panthera leo; Panthera tigris; Puma concolor; Delphinus delphis; Megaptera novaeangliae; Equus caballus; Orycteropus afer; Tragelaphus imberbis; Tamiasciurus hudsonicus; Cricetulus longicaudatus; Mesocricetus auratus; Meriones unguiculatus; Cricetomys gambianus; Galea musteloides; Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris; Bathyergus suillus; Lagenorhynchus albirostris; Macroscelides proboscideus; Sciurus carolinensis; Daubentonia madagascariensis; Eulemur rubriventer; Oreamnos americanus; Enhydra lutris; Hippotragus equinus; Hippotragus niger; Globicephala macrorhynchus; Apodemus agrarius; Carollia perspicillata; Peromyscus californicus; Tamias striatus; Steno bredanensis; Phodopus campbelli; Hylomys suillus; Urocitellus columbianus; Jaculus jaculus; Callithrix geoffroyi; Mustela frenata; Ctenomys lewisi; Sorex roboratus; Tamias amoenus; Tragelaphus angasii; Chrysocyon brachyurus; Nanger soemmerringii; Eudorcas thomsonii; Dipus sagitta; Tursiops aduncus; Tenrec ecaudatus; Neotoma cinerea; Microtus richardsoni; Pteropus giganteus; Pteropus pumilus; Mops pumilus; Meriones libycus; Setifer setosus; Ellobius talpinus; Cricetulus barabensis; Suncus varilla; Lasiopodomys mandarinus; Aonyx cinereus; Varecia rubra; Leptonycteris yerbabuenae; Eulemur rufus; Fukomys damarensis; Eulemur albifrons; Gerbillus cheesmani; Microgale drouhardi; Notamacropus rufogriseus; Nesogale talazaci
Type:
Methylation profiling by array
Platform:
GPL28271
15043 Samples
Download data: CSV, DOCX, IDAT
Series
Accession:
GSE223748
ID:
200223748
11.

DCX knockout ferret disentangles cellular landscape of lissencephaly syndrome and novel functions of DCX in neural progenitors

(Submitter supplied) Lissencephaly (LIS) represents a range of gene-associated brain abnormalities characterized by a smooth cortical surface (due to the absence or reduction of gyri and sulci) in humans. This condition manifests through various symptoms such as seizures, muscle spasms, developmental delays, cognitive impairments, and learning discrepancies, etc.1-3 To date, nearly twenty gene mutations related to lissencephaly have been identified, with DCX and LIS1 being the most commonly reported risk genes in humans1-5. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL28629
2 Samples
Download data: MTX, TSV
Series
Accession:
GSE239781
ID:
200239781
12.

Transgenic Ferret Models Define Pulmonary Ionocyte Diversity and Function

(Submitter supplied) Speciation leads to adaptive changes in organ cellular anatomy and physiology. These evolutionary changes create challenges for studying rare cell type functions that diverge between human and mice. Rare CFTR-rich pulmonary ionocytes exist throughout the cartilaginous airways of humans, but limited presence and divergent biology in the proximal trachea of mice has prevented the use of traditional transgenic models to elucidate ionocyte functions in the airway. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL28369
16 Samples
Download data: RDS
Series
Accession:
GSE233654
ID:
200233654
13.

BMP7 expression in mammalian cortical radial glial cells increases the length of the neurogenic period

(Submitter supplied) Purpose:To asses changes in gene expression profiles of single cell from the E39 Ferret Cortex. Mouse E18 littermate controls cortex, and Smo CKO (SmoF/F hGFAP-Cre) mice. Methords: E39 ferret cortex, E18 wild type and Smo CKO cortices were carefully dissected under a fluorescent stereoscope, and incubated in 4 ml of papain solution for 20 min at 37℃, The cortical tissues were gently triturated, filtered through a 40 mm strainer, and washed with HBSS to obtain the single cell suspension. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo; Mus musculus
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platforms:
GPL21273 GPL29836
4 Samples
Download data: CSV
Series
Accession:
GSE221389
ID:
200221389
14.

RNA-Sequencing of COPD ferret lung reveals uniquely expressed gene common to human COPD.

(Submitter supplied) Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a heterogeneous disease typified by not fully reversible and often progressive airflow obstruction, along with persistent respiratory symptoms. This gap is due to lack of animal models that more closely mimic human COPD are needed to bridge translational gaps. Commonly used mice model produces primarily emphysematous disease and do not develop features pathognomonic for chronic bronchitis. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL28369
12 Samples
Download data: XLSX
Series
Accession:
GSE193749
ID:
200193749
15.

Isolation of ferret astrocytes reveals their morphological, transcriptional, and functional differences from mouse astrocytes

(Submitter supplied) To identify differently expressed genes between ferret and mouse astrocytes, we performed RNA-seq studies on primary ferret and mouse astrocytes cultured in serum free medium. We isolated primary astrocytes from mixed glial cultures which are prepared from the cortices of ferrets and mice at postnatal day 1. Each biological replicate was generated from 2 individuals of the same species. We detected substantial changes in the expression of genes associated with cell proliferation and migration, and identified ferret astrocyte-specific genes.
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo; Mus musculus
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platforms:
GPL13112 GPL24172
4 Samples
Download data: TXT
Series
Accession:
GSE201199
ID:
200201199
16.

An inactivated multivalent influenza A virus vaccine is broadly protective in mice and ferrets

(Submitter supplied) This SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo; Mus musculus
Type:
Expression profiling by array
Platforms:
GPL32337 GPL7202
112 Samples
Download data: TXT
Series
Accession:
GSE205841
ID:
200205841
17.

An inactivated multivalent influenza A virus vaccine is broadly protective in mice and ferrets [ferret]

(Submitter supplied) Influenza A viruses (IAVs) present major public health threats from annual seasonal epidemics and pandemics as well as from viruses adapted to a variety of animals including poultry, pigs, and horses. Vaccines that broadly protect against all such IAVs, so-called “universal” influenza vaccines, do not currently exist, but are urgently needed. Here, we demonstrated that an inactivated, multivalent whole virus vaccine, delivered intramuscularly or intranasally, was broadly protective against challenges with multiple IAV hemagglutinin and neuraminidase subtypes in both mice and ferrets. more...
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by array
Platform:
GPL32337
40 Samples
Download data: TXT
Series
Accession:
GSE205840
ID:
200205840
18.

Sex disparities in influenza: a multiscale network analysis

(Submitter supplied) This SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL25735
285 Samples
Download data
Series
Accession:
GSE168512
ID:
200168512
19.

Sex disparities in influenza: a multiscale network analysis (Female ferrets)

(Submitter supplied) This study utilized a network-based approach to characterize the blood transcriptome collected over the course of infection with influenza A virus from female and male ferrets to dissect sex-biased gene expression shaped by genetically determined differences. It provides molecular insights into genetically driven sex differences in transcriptional regulation of immune responses.
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL25735
116 Samples
Download data: TSV
Series
Accession:
GSE168511
ID:
200168511
20.

Sex disparities in influenza: a multiscale network analysis (Male ferrets)

(Submitter supplied) This study utilized a network-based approach to characterize the blood transcriptome collected over the course of infection with influenza A virus from female and male ferrets to dissect sex-biased gene expression shaped by genetically determined differences. It provides molecular insights into genetically driven sex differences in transcriptional regulation of immune responses.
Organism:
Mustela putorius furo
Type:
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL25735
169 Samples
Download data: TSV
Series
Accession:
GSE168117
ID:
200168117
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