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Accession: PRJNA287221 ID: 287221

Mus musculus (house mouse)

Poised chromatin and bivalent domains facilitate the mitosis-to-meiosis transition in the male germline

See Genome Information for Mus musculus
The male germline transcriptome changes dramatically during the mitosis-to-meiosis transition to activate late spermatogenesis genes and to transiently suppress genes commonly expressed in somatic lineages and spermatogenesis progenitor cells, termed somatic/progenitor genes. More...
AccessionPRJNA287221; GEO: GSE69946
Data TypeEpigenomics
ScopeMultiisolate
OrganismMus musculus[Taxonomy ID: 10090]
Eukaryota; Metazoa; Chordata; Craniata; Vertebrata; Euteleostomi; Mammalia; Eutheria; Euarchontoglires; Glires; Rodentia; Myomorpha; Muroidea; Muridae; Murinae; Mus; Mus; Mus musculus
PublicationsSin HS et al., "Poised chromatin and bivalent domains facilitate the mitosis-to-meiosis transition in the male germline.", BMC Biol, 2015 Jul 22;13:53
SubmissionRegistration date: 17-Jun-2015
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
RelevanceModel Organism
Project Data:
Resource NameNumber
of Links
Sequence data
SRA Experiments29
Publications
PubMed1
PMC1
Other datasets
BioSample29
GEO DataSets1
GEO Data Details
ParameterValue
Data volume, Supplementary Mbytes4089
SRA Data Details
ParameterValue
Data volume, Gbases115
Data volume, Mbytes76024

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