Frontiers in Neuroscience (Oct 2009)

To what extent is blood a reasonable surrogate for brain in gene expression studies: estimation from mouse hippocampus and spleen

  • Matthew N Davies,
  • Sarah Lawn,
  • Steven Whatley,
  • Cathy Fernandes,
  • Robert W Williams,
  • Leonard C Schalkwyk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/neuro.15.002.2009
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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Microarrays are designed to measure genome-wide differences in gene expression. In cases where a tissue is not accessible for analysis (e.g. human brain), it is of interest to determine whether a second, accessible tissue could be used as a surrogate for transcription profiling. Surrogacy has applications in the study of behavioural and neurodegenerative disorders. Comparison between hippocampus and spleen mRNA obtained from a mouse recombinant inbred panel indicates a high degree of correlation between the tissues for genes that display a high heritability of expression level. This correlation is not limited to apparent expression differences caused by sequence polymorphisms in the target sequences and includes both cis and trans genetic effects. A tissue such as blood could therefore give surrogate information on expression in brain for a subset of genes, in particular those co-expressed between the two tissues, which have heritably varying expression.

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