Publications

142 Publications visible to you, out of a total of 142

Abstract (Expand)

Background: The transcriptome of healthy blood offers an option to characterize the physiological state of an individual with diagnostic impact. As a prerequisite such application requires the understanding of the variability of the expression landscape of healthy individual’s as a function of factors such as age, gender, and aspects of the human constitution and lifestyle. Previous studies mostly were limited to only small population sizes and thus lack representativeness in many respects. Methods and data: The present thesis provides an extensive and detailed study on the gene expression landscape of peripheral blood of healthy individuals based on transcriptome data of 3,388 individuals screened in the population study LIFE between 2011 and 2014. For analysis we applied a neural network technique using self-organizing maps (SOM). Our home-made R-program ‘oposSOM’ enables to reduce the dimension of expression data from tens of thousands of genes to a few thousand ‘meta-genes’ and generates portraits of transcriptional activity that allowed us the sample-to-sample comparison of expression patterns. Results: We disentangled the expression patterns of the portraits into 15 well separated modules of co-expressed genes. Their activation patterns allowed us to aggregate the participants into three types (‘1’, ‘M’, ‘2’). Enrichment techniques extracts the functional context of the modules and revealed that corresponding cellular processes are selectively activated and de-activated in a type-specific fashion: For example, ‘Inflammation’ and ‘Blood coagulation’ are activated in type ‘1’ and ‘Metabolic activity’ and ‘Translation’ in Type ‘2’ samples. We map clinical parameters (complete blood count, lifestyle status, medication and the anthropometric body and BMI type) into the expression landscape in order to study the association between them and the transcriptome landscape. We found that red blood cell components, drug consumption of several drug classes affecting the cardio-vascular system or blood forming organs, tobacco and alcohol consumption, and the BMI types of obese participants highly correlate with meta-genes in the type ‘1’ area, whereas type ‘2’ meta-genes maximal correlate with the lymphocyte count and pre-obese characteristics of the participants. For blood count parameters and medication we found a gender-specific bias. Conclusion: Our analysis provides a comprehensive description of the human blood transcriptome in terms of a series of characteristic expression modules and of health-relevant factors. It provides a healthy reference system for blood transcriptome profiling studies in healthcare to extract potential associations between emerging diseases and the gene expression patterns in clinical research.

Author: M. Schmidt

Date Published: 9th Jul 2005

Publication Type: Not specified

Abstract (Expand)

A controversy exists as to whether stereoscopic tilt created with interocular differences in spatial frequency is based on perception of spatial frequency disparity or positional disparity. To determine which hypothesis is correct, we investigated the influence of viewing distance on perceived tilt. Tilt was induced by having observers view, at three viewing distances, dichoptic spatial frequency grating patterns differing in frequency by 25%. By appropriate physical scaling of the size of the patterns, their spatial frequency and angular width remained unchanged as distance varied. Under such conditions, the spatial frequency disparity hypothesis predicts no effect of distance, whereas the positional disparity hypothesis predicts a significant effect of distance (due to stereoscopic depth constancy) on the magnitude of tilt. The results showed that perceived tilt does covary with distance, a result consistent with only the positional disparity hypothesis.

Authors: R. Patterson, G. Burns, S. Mooney

Date Published: 1st Aug 1989

Publication Type: Not specified

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