NCBI Logo
GEO Logo
   NCBI > GEO > Accession DisplayHelp Not logged in | LoginHelp
GEO help: Mouse over screen elements for information.
          Go
Series GSE68885 Query DataSets for GSE68885
Status Public on May 15, 2017
Title Adipocyte-derived Exosomal miRNAs from Subcutaneous Adipose Tissue: A Novel Mechanism for Obesity-Related Disease
Platform organism synthetic construct
Sample organism Homo sapiens
Experiment type Non-coding RNA profiling by array
Summary Affymetrix miRNA 3.0 array profiling of adipocyte-derived exosomes from obese and lean human subjects. We used miRNA arrays to profile exosomes shed from obese and lean human subcutaneous fat that was cultured for 60 minutes.
 
Overall design Human obese and lean subcutaneous fat were surgically acquired, dissected, and promptly cultured for 60 minutes. We used the culture supernatants for exosome purification and isolation using ExoQuick-TC Precipitation Solution.
 
Contributor(s) Barberio M, Nadler E, Freishtat RJ, Ferrante SC
Citation missing Has this study been published? Please login to update or notify GEO.
Submission date May 14, 2015
Last update date Jul 27, 2018
Contact name Robert Freishtat
E-mail(s) rfreishtat@childrensnational.org
Organization name Children's National Medical Center
Department Center for Genetic Medicine
Street address 111 Michigan Avenue NW
City Washington
State/province DC
ZIP/Postal code 20010
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL16384 [miRNA-3] Affymetrix Multispecies miRNA-3 Array
Samples (12)
GSM1223778 Obese 1 Subcutaneous
GSM1223780 Obese 2 Subcutaneous
GSM1223782 Obese 3 Subcutaneous
Relations
BioProject PRJNA283971

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE68885_RAW.tar 35.1 Mb (http)(custom) TAR (of CEL, CHP)
Processed data included within Sample table
Processed data provided as supplementary file

| NLM | NIH | GEO Help | Disclaimer | Accessibility |
NCBI Home NCBI Search NCBI SiteMap