Large scale comparison of global gene expression patterns in human and mouse
Open Access
- 23 December 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Genome Biology
- Vol. 11 (12), R124
- https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2010-11-12-r124
Abstract
Background: It is widely accepted that orthologous genes between species are conserved at the sequence level and perform similar functions in different organisms. However, the level of conservation of gene expression patterns of the orthologous genes in different species has been unclear. To address the issue, we compared gene expression of orthologous genes based on 2,557 human and 1,267 mouse samples with high quality gene expression data, selected from experiments stored in the public microarray repository ArrayExpress. Results: In a principal component analysis (PCA) of combined data from human and mouse samples merged on orthologous probesets, samples largely form distinctive clusters based on their tissue sources when projected onto the top principal components. The most prominent groups are the nervous system, muscle/heart tissues, liver and cell lines. Despite the great differences in sample characteristics and experiment conditions, the overall patterns of these prominent clusters are strikingly similar for human and mouse. We further analyzed data for each tissue separately and found that the most variable genes in each tissue are highly enriched with human-mouse tissue-specific orthologs and the least variable genes in each tissue are enriched with human-mouse housekeeping orthologs. Conclusions: The results indicate that the global patterns of tissue-specific expression of orthologous genes are conserved in human and mouse. The expression of groups of orthologous genes co-varies in the two species, both for the most variable genes and the most ubiquitously expressed genes.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- A global map of human gene expressionNature Biotechnology, 2010
- An Atlas of Combinatorial Transcriptional Regulation in Mouse and ManCell, 2010
- Cross species analysis of microarray expression dataBioinformatics, 2009
- Conservation of core gene expression in vertebrate tissuesJournal of Biology, 2009
- EnsemblCompara GeneTrees: Complete, duplication-aware phylogenetic trees in vertebratesGenome Research, 2008
- Combined analysis reveals a core set of cycling genesGenome Biology, 2007
- Tissue-specific transcriptional regulation has diverged significantly between human and mouseNature Genetics, 2007
- Gene set enrichment analysis: A knowledge-based approach for interpreting genome-wide expression profilesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2005
- A gene atlas of the mouse and human protein-encoding transcriptomesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004
- Incongruent Expression Profiles between Human and Mouse Orthologous Genes Suggest Widespread Neutral Evolution of Transcription ControlOMICS: A Journal of Integrative Biology, 2004