Data from: Maternal stress has divergent effects on gene expression patterns in the brains of male and female threespine stickleback
收藏DataONE2021-11-29 更新2024-06-08 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:4c2eb30ca016d3136549e8cd72a2eddf87fb11ab7cdf955f5df50d92d4773ec4
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
AbstractMaternal stress can have long-term effects on neurodevelopment that can influence offspring performance and population evolutionary trajectories. To examine the mechanistic basis for these neurodevelopmental effects of maternal stress, we used RNA-seq to assess differential gene expression across the brain transcriptome of adult male and female threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) from stressed and unstressed mothers. We identified sexually divergent effects of maternal stress on the brain transcriptome. In males, genes that were up-regulated by maternal stress were enriched for processes involved in synaptic function and organization and steroid hormone mediated signaling pathways, whereas in females genes that were up-regulated by maternal stress were enriched for processes involved in protein translation and metabolic functions. The expression of several genes involved in the hypothalamic-pituitary-interrenal response to stress and epigenetic processes such as the regulation of DNA methylation patterns and miRNAs increased in males and not in females. These data suggest that maternal stress has markedly different effects on cellular pathways in the brains of male and female offspring of mothers that are exposed to stress, which could have important implications when assessing the long-term ecological and evolutionary impacts of stress across generations., Usage notesCLC_Alignment_Read_Counts.csvTotal read counts per transcript for each sample from CLC alignment. UM = male from unstressed mother, UF = female from unstressed mother, SM = male from stressed mother, SF = female from stressed mother.SticklebackMaternalStress.csv
创建时间:
2024-03-16



