|
Status |
Public on May 27, 2014 |
Title |
VN3028II.3_sample 20 |
Sample type |
RNA |
|
|
Source name |
Bronchial Brush
|
Organism |
Macaca mulatta |
Characteristics |
animal number: 2 influenza strain: VN3028II time (days post infection): 3 tissue: Bronchial Brush
|
Treatment protocol |
Tissue from brushes were placed in the RNA stabilization reagent RNAlater (Ambion, CA) and stored at -80°C. All tissues were thawed together and homogenized (2 minutes at 30Hz) by using a TissueLyser (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany), following the manufacturer’s instructions.
|
Extracted molecule |
total RNA |
Extraction protocol |
Total RNA was extracted from bronchial brushes with the RNeasy Mini Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) following the manufacturer's recommendation.
|
Label |
Cy3
|
Label protocol |
Using the Quick Amp Labeling Kit, T7 RNA polymerase was used to simultaneously amplify target material and incorporate cyanine 3-labeled CTP to prepare Cy3-labeled cRNA.
|
|
|
Hybridization protocol |
Using Agilents Gene Expression Hybridizatoin kit #4 and Gene Expression wash pack #5, Cy3-labeled cRNA preparations were hybridized with rhesus macaque arrays (Agilent Microarray Design Identification Number 015421) for 17 h at 65°C.
|
Scan protocol |
Immediately after washing, Feature Extraction Software, version 7 (Agilent Technologies) was used for image analysis and data extraction.
|
Description |
SAMPLE 20
|
Data processing |
Per chip and per gene normalization was performed using the LIMMA package in R.
|
|
|
Submission date |
May 27, 2014 |
Last update date |
May 28, 2014 |
Contact name |
Yoshihiro Kawaoka |
Organization name |
Japanese Science and Technology Agency
|
Department |
ERATO Influenza-induced Host Responses Project
|
Lab |
Kawaoka
|
Street address |
Shirokanedai 4-6-1
|
City |
Minato |
State/province |
Tokyo |
ZIP/Postal code |
1088639 |
Country |
Japan |
|
|
Platform ID |
GPL14569 |
Series (1) |
GSE57970 |
Disease severity is associated with differential gene expression at the early and late phases of infection in non-human primates infected with different H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses |
|