-
Recent Posts
- New gene page, new Bgee interface
- Confirming that autism and epilepsy genes are expressed in specific brain areas
- Gene expression enrichment tests are sensitive enough to detect where your background data came from #TopAnat
- When fold-enrichment is more informative than p-values: #TopAnat analysis of autism genes from GWAS
- #TopAnat where are genes significant in a breast cancer GWAS expressed?
Twitter
- @ISBSIB All of our #TopAnat threads of the week: genes involved in autism twitter.com/Bgeedb/status/… mouse spermatogen… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 3 days ago
- And that's it for our tour of #TopAnat examples! Don't hesitate to play with your own gene lists, and tell us if yo… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 3 days ago
- @uniprot @ISBSIB @uberanat When your test list is limited to protein-coding genes by design, be careful to change t… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 3 days ago
- @uniprot @ISBSIB Don't know what a mononuclear cell is? Click on the Anat Entity Id link and get to the @uberanat o… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 3 days ago
- The 5th example of #TopAnat is all the genes corresponding to human proteins in the @uniprot #Covid19 portal… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 3 days ago
Facebook
Archives
Categories
Meta
Tag Archives: evolution
Not only diseases, evolution too!
In its latest issue, Nature is writing about how the one million gene expression data sets currently publicly available can help researchers understand diseases (Monya Baker, Gene data to hit milestone (2012) Nature 487: pp. 282-283). However, that’s not all … Continue reading
Posted in evolution, using bgee
Tagged bioinformatics, database, evolution, gene expression
Leave a comment