U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format
Items per page
Sort by

Send to:

Choose Destination

Links from GEO DataSets

Items: 11

1.
Full record GDS2957

Resting and activated natural killer cells

Analysis of resting and activated natural killer (NK) cells. Activated NK cells can use the granule exocytosis pathway to kill target cells upon recognition, resting NK cells are minimally cytotoxic. Results provide insight into the molecular basis of the cytotoxicity displayed by NK cells.
Organism:
Mus musculus
Type:
Expression profiling by array, count, 3 cell type sets
Platform:
GPL1261
Series:
GSE7764
10 Samples
Download data: CEL
DataSet
Accession:
GDS2957
ID:
2957
2.

mRNA expression profiles of resting and IL-15 activated murine NK cells

(Submitter supplied) Murine NK cells were compared at rest and following 24 hours of IL-15 stimulation for their mRNA expression profiles on the Affymetrix MOE430_2 microarray platform. Additional comparators included resting bulk splenocytes. Keywords: mRNA, mouse, NK cell, IL-15
Organism:
Mus musculus
Type:
Expression profiling by array
Dataset:
GDS2957
Platform:
GPL1261
10 Samples
Download data: CEL
Series
Accession:
GSE7764
ID:
200007764
3.

Expression data from activated NK cells

(Submitter supplied) This SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
Organism:
synthetic construct; Homo sapiens
Type:
Expression profiling by array; Non-coding RNA profiling by array
Platforms:
GPL14613 GPL11532
32 Samples
Download data: CEL
Series
Accession:
GSE50840
ID:
200050840
4.

Expression data from activated NK cells [miRNA]

(Submitter supplied) Natural Killer (NK) cells present natural cytotoxicity against tumor cells, although their activity is increased after activation.NK cell activation depends on a complex intracellular signaling process mediated by activating and inhibitory receptors and the functional outcome depends on the integration of the activating and inhibitory signals received. Soluble cytokines and/or ligands on target cells bind the NK cell receptors, and hence, influence the final NK cell response: attack versus ignorance. more...
Organism:
synthetic construct; Homo sapiens
Type:
Non-coding RNA profiling by array
Platform:
GPL14613
16 Samples
Download data: CEL
Series
Accession:
GSE50839
ID:
200050839
5.

Expression data from activated NK cells [RNA]

(Submitter supplied) Natural Killer (NK) cells present natural cytotoxicity against tumor cells, although their activity is increased after activation. NK cell activation depends on a complex intracellular signaling process mediated by activating and inhibitory receptors and the functional outcome depends on the integration of the activating and inhibitory signals received. Soluble cytokines and/or ligands on target cells bind the NK cell receptors, and hence, influence the final NK cell response: attack versus ignorance. more...
Organism:
Homo sapiens
Type:
Expression profiling by array
Platform:
GPL11532
16 Samples
Download data: CEL
Series
Accession:
GSE50838
ID:
200050838
6.

Differential Expressions of miRNAs in resting and activated human in vitro-differentiated NK cells

(Submitter supplied) To investigate miRNA expressions of miRNA upon activation.
Organism:
Homo sapiens
Type:
Non-coding RNA profiling by array
Platform:
GPL10850
4 Samples
Download data: TXT, XLSX
Series
Accession:
GSE32411
ID:
200032411
7.

Next-generation sequencing identifies the natural killer cell microRNA transcriptome

(Submitter supplied) Natural killer (NK) cells are innate lymphocytes important for early host defense against infectious pathogens and surveillance against malignant transformation. Resting murine NK cells regulate the translation of effector molecule mRNAs (e.g. granzyme B, GzmB) through unclear molecular mechanisms. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that post-transcriptionally regulate the translation of their mRNA targets, and are therefore candidates mediating this control process. more...
Organism:
Mus musculus
Type:
Non-coding RNA profiling by array
Platform:
GPL10235
8 Samples
Download data: TXT
Series
Accession:
GSE21003
ID:
200021003
8.

The transcription factor Tcf1 ensures the development and cytotoxic function of NK cells by limiting the expression of Granzymes

(Submitter supplied) This SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
Organism:
Mus musculus
Type:
Expression profiling by array; Genome binding/occupancy profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platforms:
GPL17021 GPL6246
12 Samples
Download data: CEL, CSV
Series
Accession:
GSE92711
ID:
200092711
9.

The transcription factor Tcf1 ensures the development and cytotoxic function of NK cells by limiting the expression of Granzymes [ChIP-Seq]

(Submitter supplied) The transcription factor Tcf1 plays an essential role for the development of NK cells, however, its precise role for NK cell development, maturation and function is poorly understood. Here we show that distinct domains of Tcf1 direct bone marrow progenitors towards the NK cell lineage and mediate lineage commitment and NK cell expansion, and that Tcf1 downregulation is required for terminal NK cell maturation. more...
Organism:
Mus musculus
Type:
Genome binding/occupancy profiling by high throughput sequencing
Platform:
GPL17021
6 Samples
Download data: CSV
Series
Accession:
GSE92710
ID:
200092710
10.

The transcription factor Tcf1 ensures the development and cytotoxic function of NK cells by limiting the expression of Granzymes [Affymetrix]

(Submitter supplied) The transcription factor Tcf1 plays an essential role for the development of NK cells, however, its precise role for NK cell development, maturation and function is poorly understood. Here we show that distinct domains of Tcf1 direct bone marrow progenitors towards the NK cell lineage and mediate lineage commitment and NK cell expansion, and that Tcf1 downregulation is required for terminal NK cell maturation. more...
Organism:
Mus musculus
Type:
Expression profiling by array
Platform:
GPL6246
6 Samples
Download data: CEL
Series
Accession:
GSE92709
ID:
200092709
11.

Murine Acute Lung Injury

(Submitter supplied) With advances in supportive therapy in the last two decades, mortality rates from ALI/ARDS have improved somewhat, but remain around 30 to 40% with significant morbidity in survivors. Several promising treatments are in various stages of evaluation, but many have failed to prove beneficial in large randomized clinical trials (RCT). The first definitive step forward in ALI therapeutics occurred recently as a result of a large RCT demonstrating a mortality decrease from 40 to 31% with the use of low-volume ventilation strategies. more...
Organism:
Mus musculus
Type:
Expression profiling by array
Platform:
GPL1261
18 Samples
Download data: CEL
Series
Accession:
GSE10343
ID:
200010343
Format
Items per page
Sort by

Send to:

Choose Destination

Supplemental Content

db=gds|term=|query=4|qty=4|blobid=MCID_673bc291a56b24050d3a3227|ismultiple=true|min_list=5|max_list=20|def_tree=20|def_list=|def_view=|url=/Taxonomy/backend/subset.cgi?|trace_url=/stat?
   Taxonomic Groups  [List]
Tree placeholder
    Top Organisms  [Tree]

Find related data

Recent activity

Your browsing activity is empty.

Activity recording is turned off.

Turn recording back on

See more...
Support Center