Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination
Accession: PRJNA172931 ID: 172931

Transcriptomes of the Drosophila subspecies

This project involved the sequencing of normalized transcriptomes from six species of the Drosophila ananassae subgroup.
AccessionPRJNA172931
Data TypeTranscriptome or Gene expression
ScopeMultispecies
PublicationsSignor S et al., "Genomic resources for multiple species in the Drosophila ananassae species group.", Fly (Austin), 2013 Jan-Mar;7(1):47-57
Grants
  • "The Developmental Basis of Convergent Evolution" (Grant ID DEB-1110246 , National Science Foundation)
  • "Developmental basis of convergent evolution of Drosophila pigmentation patterns" (Grant ID IOS-0815141 , National Science Foundation)
SubmissionRegistration date: 15-Aug-2012
University of California, Davis
RelevanceEvolution
Project Data:
Resource NameNumber
of Links
Sequence data
Nucleotide (total)126135
TSA master6
Transcript126129
SRA Experiments6
Publications
PubMed1
PMC1
Other datasets
BioSample6
SRA Data Details
ParameterValue
Data volume, Gbases27
Data volume, Mbytes16540

Supplemental Content

Recent activity

  • Mus musculus
    Mus musculus
    Polycomb associates genome-wide with a specific RNA polymerase II variant, and regulates metabolic genes in ES cells (ChIP-Seq)
    BioProject
  • KLRG1+ Memory CD8 T cells Combine Properties of Short-lived Effectors and Long-l...
    KLRG1+ Memory CD8 T cells Combine Properties of Short-lived Effectors and Long-lived Memory
    KLRG1+ Memory CD8 T cells Combine Properties of Short-lived Effectors and Long-lived Memory
    BioProject
  • Loss of CHD1 promotes chromatin dysregulation leading to heterogeneous mechanism...
    Loss of CHD1 promotes chromatin dysregulation leading to heterogeneous mechanisms of resistance to hormone therapy in prostate cancer [RNA-seq]
    Loss of CHD1 promotes chromatin dysregulation leading to heterogeneous mechanisms of resistance to hormone therapy in prostate cancer [RNA-seq]
    BioProject
  • Danio rerio
    Danio rerio
    Using individual coping styles to explain within-population variation in adaptive gene expression
    BioProject

Your browsing activity is empty.

Activity recording is turned off.

Turn recording back on

See more...
Support Center