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Home › Dataset Library › Fluoxetine resistance in mice is associated with attenuated progression of a stereotyped dentate gyrus gene expression program

Dataset: Fluoxetine resistance in mice is associated with attenuated progression of a stereotyped dentate gyrus gene expression program

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) such as fluoxetine are the most common treatment for major depression. However,...

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Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) such as fluoxetine are the most common treatment for major depression. However, approximately 50% of depressed patients fail to achieve an effective treatment response. Understanding how gene expression systems relate to treatment responses may be critical for understanding antidepressant resistance. Transcriptome profiling allows for the simultaneous measurement of expression levels for thousands of genes and the opportunity to utilize this information to determine mechanisms underlying antidepressant treatment responses. However, the best way to relate this immense amount of information to treatment resistance remains unclear. We take a novel approach to this question by examining dentate gyrus transcriptomes from the perspective of a stereotyped fluoxetine-induced gene expression program. Expression programs usually represent stereotyped changes in expression levels that occur as cells transition phenotypes. Fluoxetine will shift transcriptomes so they lie somewhere between a baseline state and a full-response at the end of the program. The position along this fluoxetine-induced gene expression program (program status) was measured using principal components analysis (PCA). The same expression program was initiated in treatment-responsive and resistant mice but treatment response was associated with further progression along the fluoxetine-induced gene expression program. The study of treatment-related differences in gene expression program status represents a novel way to conceptualize differences in treatment responses at a transcriptome level. Understanding how antidepressant-induced gene expression program progression is modulated represents an important area for future research and could guide efforts to develop novel augmentation strategies for antidepressant treatment resistant individuals. 38 samples, 2 dentate regions (dorsal/ventral), 3 groups (control, antidepressant resistant (4 mice), antidepressant responsive (7 mice), untreated (8 mice).

Species:
mouse

Samples:
38

Source:
E-GEOD-43261

Updated:
Dec.12, 2014

Registered:
Nov.12, 2014


Factors: (via ArrayExpress)
Sample TREATMENT ORGANISM PART RESPONSE
GSM105956 untreated Dorsal dentate gyrus control
GSM105956 untreated Dorsal dentate gyrus control
GSM105956 untreated Dorsal dentate gyrus control
GSM105956 untreated Dorsal dentate gyrus control
GSM105956 untreated Dorsal dentate gyrus control
GSM105956 untreated Dorsal dentate gyrus control
GSM105956 untreated Dorsal dentate gyrus control
GSM105956 untreated Dorsal dentate gyrus control
GSM1059569 untreated Ventral dentate gyrus control
GSM1059569 untreated Ventral dentate gyrus control
GSM1059569 untreated Ventral dentate gyrus control
GSM1059569 untreated Ventral dentate gyrus control
GSM1059569 untreated Ventral dentate gyrus control
GSM1059569 untreated Ventral dentate gyrus control
GSM1059569 untreated Ventral dentate gyrus control
GSM1059569 untreated Ventral dentate gyrus control
GSM1059577 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059577 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059577 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059577 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059577 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059577 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059577 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059584 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059584 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059584 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059584 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059584 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059584 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Responder
GSM1059584 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Responder
GSM105959 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Resistant
GSM105959 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Resistant
GSM105959 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Resistant
GSM105959 fluoxetine Dorsal dentate gyrus Resistant
GSM1059595 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Resistant
GSM1059595 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Resistant
GSM1059595 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Resistant
GSM1059595 fluoxetine Ventral dentate gyrus Resistant

Tags

  • dorsal
  • pca
  • serotonin
  • ventral

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