RNA-seq: primary cells, cell lines and heat stress

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2015-01-19
Authors
Pritchett, Elizabeth
Sun, Liang
Hubbard, Allen
Kniel, Kalmia
Markland, Sarah
Wang, Qing
Ashwell, Chris
Persia, Michael
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Rothschild, Max
Distinguished Professor Emeritus
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Lamont, Susan
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Animal Science

The Department of Animal Science originally concerned itself with teaching the selection, breeding, feeding and care of livestock. Today it continues this study of the symbiotic relationship between animals and humans, with practical focuses on agribusiness, science, and animal management.

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The Department of Animal Husbandry was established in 1898. The name of the department was changed to the Department of Animal Science in 1962. The Department of Poultry Science was merged into the department in 1971.

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Abstract

Transcriptome analysis by RNA-seq has emerged as a high-throughput, cost-effective means to evaluate the expression pattern of genes in organisms. Unlike other methods, such as microarrays or quantitative PCR, RNA-seq is a target free method that permits analysis of essentially any RNA that can be amplified from a cell or tissue. At its most basic, RNA-seq can determine individual gene expression levels by counting the number of times a particular transcript was found in the sequence data. Transcript levels can be compared across multiple samples to identify differentially expressed genes and infer differences in biological states between the samples. We have used this approach to examine gene expression patterns in chicken and human cells, with particular interest in determining response to heat stress.

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This is a pre-print of the article Schmidt, Carl J., Elizabeth M. Pritchett, Liang Sun, Richard V.N. Davis, Allen Hubbard, Kalmia E. Kniel, Sarah M. Markland, Qing Wang, Chris Ashwell, Michael Persia, Max F. Rothschild, and Susan J. Lamont. "RNA-seq: primary cells, cell lines and heat stress." bioRxiv (2015). DOI: 10.1101/013979. Posted with permission.

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Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2015
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