200 resultados para CDNA MICROARRAYS
Resumo:
Human genetics has progressed at an unprecedented pace during the past 10 years. DNA microarrays currently allow screening of the entire human genome with high level of coverage and we are now entering the era of high-throughput sequencing. These remarkable technical advances are influencing the way medical research is conducted and have boosted our understanding of the structure of the human genome as well as of disease biology. In this context, it is crucial for clinicians to understand the main concepts and limitations of modern genetics. This review will describe key concepts in genetics, including the different types of genetic markers in the human genome, review current methods to detect DNA variation, describe major online public databases in genetics, explain key concepts in statistical genetics and finally present commonly used study designs in clinical and epidemiological research. This review will therefore concentrate on human genetic variation analysis.
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JIP-1 is a cytoplasmic inhibitor of the c-Jun amino-terminal kinase activated pathway recently cloned from a mouse brain cDNA library. We report herein the expression cloning of a rat cDNA encoding a JIP-1-related nuclear protein from a pancreatic beta-cell cDNA library that we named IB1 for Islet-Brain 1. IB1 was isolated by its ability to bind to GTII, a cis-regulatory element of the GLUT2 promoter. The IB1 cDNA encodes a 714-amino acid protein, which differs from JIP-1 by the insertion of 47 amino acids in the carboxyl-terminal part of the protein. The remaining 667 amino acids are 97% identical to JIP-1. The 47-amino acid insertion contains a truncated phosphotyrosine interaction domain and a putative helix-loop-helix motif. Recombinant IB1 (amino acids 1-714 and 280-714) was shown to bind in vitro to GTII. Functionally IB1 transactivated the GLUT2 gene. IB1 was localized within the cytoplasm and the nucleus of insulin-secreting cells or COS-7 cells transfected with an expression vector encoding IB1. Using a heterologous GAL4 system, we localized an activation domain of IB1 within the first 280 amino acids of the protein. These data demonstrate that IB1 is a DNA-binding protein related to JIP-1, which is highly expressed in pancreatic beta-cells where it functions as a transactivator of the GLUT2 gene.
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Gene expression patterns are a key feature in understanding gene function, notably in development. Comparing gene expression patterns between animals is a major step in the study of gene function as well as of animal evolution. It also provides a link between genes and phenotypes. Thus we have developed Bgee, a database designed to compare expression patterns between animals, by implementing ontologies describing anatomies and developmental stages of species, and then designing homology relationships between anatomies and comparison criteria between developmental stages. To define homology relationships between anatomical features we have developed the software Homolonto, which uses a modified ontology alignment approach to propose homology relationships between ontologies. Bgee then uses these aligned ontologies, onto which heterogeneous expression data types are mapped. These already include microarrays and ESTs.
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BACKGROUND: In sporadic Tauopathies, neurofibrillary degeneration (NFD) is characterised by the intraneuronal aggregation of wild-type Tau proteins. In the human brain, the hierarchical pathways of this neurodegeneration have been well established in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other sporadic tauopathies such as argyrophilic grain disorder and progressive supranuclear palsy but the molecular and cellular mechanisms supporting this progression are yet not known. These pathways appear to be associated with the intercellular transmission of pathology, as recently suggested in Tau transgenic mice. However, these conclusions remain ill-defined due to a lack of toxicity data and difficulties associated with the use of mutant Tau. RESULTS: Using a lentiviral-mediated rat model of hippocampal NFD, we demonstrated that wild-type human Tau protein is axonally transferred from ventral hippocampus neurons to connected secondary neurons even at distant brain areas such as olfactory and limbic systems indicating a trans-synaptic protein transfer. Using different immunological tools to follow phospho-Tau species, it was clear that Tau pathology generated using mutated Tau remains near the IS whereas it spreads much further using the wild-type one. CONCLUSION: Taken together, these results support a novel mechanism for Tau protein transfer compared to previous reports based on transgenic models with mutant cDNA. It also demonstrates that mutant Tau proteins are not suitable for the development of experimental models helpful to validate therapeutic intervention interfering with Tau spreading.
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In ovarian follicles, cumulus cells provide the oocyte with small molecules that permit growth and control maturation. These nutrients reach the germinal cell through gap junction channels, which are present between the cumulus cells and the oocyte, and between the cumulus cells. In this study the involvement of intercellular communication mediated by gap junction channels on oocyte maturation of in vitro cultured bovine cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) was investigated. The stages of oocyte maturation were determined by Hoechst 33342 staining, which showed that 90% of COCs placed in the maturation medium for 24 h progress to the metaphase II stage. Bovine COC gap junction communication was disrupted initially using n-alkanols, which inhibit any passage through gap junctions. In the presence of 1-heptanol (3 mmol l(-1)) or octanol (3.0 mmol l(-1) and 0.3 mmol l(-1)), only 29% of the COCs reached metaphase II. Removal of the uncoupling agent was associated with restoration of oocyte maturation, indicating that treatment with n-alkanols was neither cytotoxic nor irreversible. Concentrations of connexin 43 (Cx43), the major gap junction protein expressed in the COCs, were decreased specifically using a recombinant adenovirus expressing the antisense Cx43 cDNA (Ad-asCx43). The efficacy of adenoviral infection was > 95% in cumulus cells evaluated after infection with recombinant adenoviruses expressing the green fluorescence protein. RT-PCR performed on total RNA isolated from Ad-asCx43-infected COCs showed that the rat Cx43 cDNA was transcribed. Western blot analysis revealed a three-fold decrease in Cx43 expression in COCs expressing the antisense RNA for Cx43. Injection of cumulus cells with Lucifer yellow demonstrated further that the resulting lower amount of Cx43 in infected COCs is associated with a two-fold decrease in the extent of coupling between cumulus cells. In addition, oocyte maturation was decreased by 50% in the infected COC cultures. These results indicate that Cx43-mediated communication between cumulus cells plays a crucial role in maturation of bovine oocytes.
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A recombinant baculovirus expressing the murine class I MHC heavy chain H-2Kd cDNA under the transcriptional control of Autografa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (AcNPV) polyhedrin promoter has been isolated and used to infect Sf9 lepidopteran cells either alone or in association with a previously isolated virus expressing mouse beta 2-microglobulina (beta 2-ma). When infected with the heavy chain-encoding virus alone, H-2Kd was produced in a beta 2-m-free conformation detected on the surface of infected cells by conformation-independent antibodies. When Sf9 cells were co-infected with both viruses, approximately 10% of the heavy chain pool was engaged in the formation of native heterodimeric MHC class I molecules, which were glycosylated and transported to the cell surface as demonstrated by radio-binding experiments and flow cytometry. The assembly of the recombinant class I molecule was dependent on peptide, since heterodimer formation was brought about by H-2Kd-specific peptide ligands both in vivo, upon incubation with dually infected cells, and in vitro, in cell-free detergent extracts. In addition, a change in heavy chain conformation was brought about upon incubation with high concentrations (100 microM) of an H-2Kd-restricted octapeptide epitope from Plasmodium berghei. Furthermore, using low concentrations (3 nM) of a photoaffinity label derivative of this peptide, we show direct binding to cells co-expressing class I heavy chain and mouse beta 2-m but not to cells expressing free heavy chain only.
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We previously reported that excess of deoxycorticosterone-acetate (DOCA)/salt-induced cardiac hypertrophy in the absence of hypertension in one-renin gene mice. This model allows us to study molecular mechanisms of high-salt intake in the development of cardiovascular remodeling, independently of blood pressure in a high mineralocorticoid state. In this study, we compared the effect of 5-wk low- and high-salt intake on cardiovascular remodeling and cardiac differential gene expression in mice receiving the same amount of DOCA. Differential gene and protein expression was measured by high-density cDNA microarray assays, real-time PCR and Western blot analysis in DOCA-high salt (HS) vs. DOCA-low salt (LS) mice. DOCA-HS mice developed cardiac hypertrophy, coronary perivascular fibrosis, and left ventricular dysfunction. Differential gene and protein expression demonstrated that high-salt intake upregulated a subset of genes encoding for proteins involved in inflammation and extracellular matrix remodeling (e.g., Col3a1, Col1a2, Hmox1, and Lcn2). A major subset of downregulated genes encoded for transcription factors, including myeloid differentiation primary response (MyD) genes. Our data provide some evidence that vascular remodeling, fibrosis, and inflammation are important consequences of a high-salt intake in DOCA mice. Our study suggests that among the different pathogenic factors of cardiac and vascular remodeling, such as hypertension and mineralocorticoid excess and sodium intake, the latter is critical for the development of the profibrotic and proinflammatory phenotype observed in the heart of normotensive DOCA-treated mice.
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The cDNA encoding the NH2-terminal 589 amino acids of the extracellular domain of the human polymeric immunoglobulin receptor was inserted into transfer vectors to generate recombinant baculo- and vaccinia viruses. Following infection of insect and mammalian cells, respectively, the resulting truncated protein corresponding to human secretory component (hSC) was secreted with high efficiency into serum-free culture medium. The Sf9 insect cell/baculovirus system yielded as much as 50 mg of hSC/liter of culture, while the mammalian cells/vaccinia virus system produced up to 10 mg of protein/liter. The M(r) of recombinant hSC varied depending on the cell line in which it was expressed (70,000 in Sf9 cells and 85-95,000 in CV-1, TK- 143B and HeLa). These variations in M(r) resulted from different glycosylation patterns, as evidenced by endoglycosidase digestion. Efficient single-step purification of the recombinant protein was achieved either by concanavalin A affinity chromatography or by Ni(2+)-chelate affinity chromatography, when a 6xHis tag was engineered to the carboxyl terminus of hSC. Recombinant hSC retained the capacity to specifically reassociate with dimeric IgA purified from hybridoma cells.
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Purpose: Gene therapy of severe retinal dystrophies directly affecting photoreceptor is still a challenge in terms of clinical application. One of the main hurdles is to generate high transgene expression specifically in rods or cones. In the present study, we are investigating the possibility to drive hPDE6b expression in the Rd10 mouse retina using a specific sequence of the human PDE6b promoter. Methods: Two 5' flanking fragments of the human PDE6b gene: (-93 to +53 (146 bp) and -297 to +53 (350 bp, see Di Polo and Farber, 1995) were cloned in different plasmids in order to check their expression in vitro and in vivo. These elements drove the activity of either luciferase (pGL3 plasmids) or EGFP (AAV2/8 backbone). Then, an AAV2/8 vector carrying the PDE6b cDNA was tested with subretinal injections at P9 in the Rd10 eyes. Eye fundus, OCT, ERG recordings and histological investigations were performed to assess the efficacy of the gene transfer. Results: The short PDE6b promoter containing 146bp (-93 to +53) showed the highest activity in the Y-79 cells, as described previously (Di Polo and Farber, 1995). Subretinal administrations of AAV2/8-PDE6bpromoter-EGFP allowed a rapid expression specifically in rods and not in cones. The expression is faster than a vector containing the CMV promoter. The AAV2/8-PDE6bpromoter-PDE6b and the control vector were injected at P9 in the Rd10 mouse retina and investigated 5 weeks post-injection. Out of 14 eyes, 6 presented an increased rod sensitivity of about 300 fold, and increased a- and b-wave responses in ERG recordings. Flicker stimulations revealed that cones are also functional. OCT images and histological analyses revealed an increased ONL size in the injected area. The retina treated with the therapeutic vector presented 4-6 rows of photoreceptors with outersegments containing PDE6b. In the control eyes, only 2-4 rows of photoreceptors with almost no OS were observed . Conclusions: The 146 bp promoter sequence (-93 to + 53) is the shortest regulatory element described to date which allows to obtain efficient rod-specific expression in the context of somatic gene transfer. This first result is of great interest for AAV vector design in general allowing more space for the accommodation of transgenes of interest and good expression in rods. Moreover we showed the proof of principle of the efficacy of AAV2/8-PDE6bp-PDE6b vector in the Rd10 mouse model of severe photoreceptor degeneration without using neither AAV mutated capsids, nor self-complementary vectors.
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Powdery mildew is an important disease of wheat caused by the obligate biotrophic fungus Blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici. This pathogen invades exclusively epidermal cells after penetrating directly through the cell wall. Because powdery mildew colonizes exclusively epidermal cells, it is of importance not only to identify genes which are activated, but also to monitor tissue specificity of gene activation. Acquired resistance of wheat to powdery mildew can be induced by a previous inoculation with the non-host pathogen B. graminis f. sp. hordei, the causal agent of barley powdery mildew. The establishment of the resistant state is accompanied by the activation of genes. Here we report the tissue-specific cDNA-AFLP analysis and cloning of transcripts accumulating 6 and 24 h after the resistance-inducing inoculation with B. graminis f. sp. hordei. A total of 25,000 fragments estimated to represent about 17,000 transcripts were displayed. Out of these, 141 transcripts, were found to accumulate after Bgh inoculation using microarray hybridization analysis. Forty-four accumulated predominantly in the epidermis whereas 76 transcripts accumulated mostly in mesophyll tissue.
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Previous microarray studies on breast cancer identified multiple tumour classes, of which the most prominent, named luminal and basal, differ in expression of the oestrogen receptor alpha gene (ER). We report here the identification of a group of breast tumours with increased androgen signalling and a 'molecular apocrine' gene expression profile. Tumour samples from 49 patients with large operable or locally advanced breast cancers were tested on Affymetrix U133A gene expression microarrays. Principal components analysis and hierarchical clustering split the tumours into three groups: basal, luminal and a group we call molecular apocrine. All of the molecular apocrine tumours have strong apocrine features on histological examination (P=0.0002). The molecular apocrine group is androgen receptor (AR) positive and contains all of the ER-negative tumours outside the basal group. Kolmogorov-Smirnov testing indicates that oestrogen signalling is most active in the luminal group, and androgen signalling is most active in the molecular apocrine group. ERBB2 amplification is commoner in the molecular apocrine than the other groups. Genes that best split the three groups were identified by Wilcoxon test. Correlation of the average expression profile of these genes in our data with the expression profile of individual tumours in four published breast cancer studies suggest that molecular apocrine tumours represent 8-14% of tumours in these studies. Our data show that it is possible with microarray data to divide mammary tumour cells into three groups based on steroid receptor activity: luminal (ER+ AR+), basal (ER- AR-) and molecular apocrine (ER- AR+).
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Of all Pacific salmonids, Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha display the greatest variability in return times to freshwater. The molecular mechanisms of these differential return times have not been well described. Current methods, such as long serial analysis of gene expression (LongSAGE) and microarrays, allow gene expression to be analyzed for thousands of genes simultaneously. To investigate whether differential gene expression is observed between fall- and spring-run Chinook salmon from California's Central Valley, LongSAGE libraries were constructed. Three libraries containing between 25,512 and 29,372 sequenced tags (21 base pairs/tag) were generated using messenger RNA from the brains of adult Chinook salmon returning in fall and spring and from one ocean-caught Chinook salmon. Tags were annotated to genes using complementary DNA libraries from Atlantic salmon Salmo salar and rainbow trout O. mykiss. Differentially expressed genes, as estimated by differences in the number of sequence tags, were found in all pairwise comparisons of libraries (freshwater versus saltwater = 40 genes; fall versus spring = 11 genes: and spawning versus nonspawning = 51 genes). The gene for ependymin, an extracellular glycoprotein involved in behavioral plasticity in fish, exhibited the most differential expression among the three groupings. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction analysis verified the differential expression of ependymin between the fall- and spring-run samples. These LongSAGE libraries, the first reported for Chinook salmon, provide a window of the transcriptional changes during Chinook salmon return migration to freshwater and spawning and increase the amount of expressed sequence data.
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The calcium-binding protein calretinin has emerged as a useful marker for the identification of mesotheliomas of the epithelioid and mixed types, but its putative role in tumor development has not been addressed previously. Although exposure to asbestos fibers is considered the main cause of mesothelioma, undoubtedly, not all mesothelioma patients have a history of asbestos exposure. The question as to whether the SV40 virus is involved as a possible co-factor is still highly debated. Here we show that increased expression of SV40 early gene products in the mesothelial cell line MeT-5A induces the expression of calretinin and that elevated calretinin levels strongly correlate with increased resistance to asbestos cytotoxicity. Calretinin alone mediates a significant part of this protective effect because cells stably transfected with calretinin cDNA were clearly more resistant to the toxic effects of crocidolite than mock-transfected control cells. Down-regulation of calretinin by antisense methods restored the sensitivity to asbestos toxicity to a large degree. The protective effect observed in clones with higher calretinin expression levels could be eliminated by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitors, implying an important role for the PI3K/AKT signaling (survival) pathway in mediating the protective effect. Up-regulation of calretinin, resulting from either asbestos exposure or SV40 oncoproteins, may be a common denominator that leads to increased resistance to asbestos cytotoxicity and thereby contributes to mesothelioma carcinogenesis.
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Members of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family play key roles in the regulation of inflammation, immune responses and tissue homeostasis. Here we describe the identification of the chicken homologue of mammalian B cell activating factor of the TNF family (BAFF/BLyS). By searching a chicken EST database we identified two overlapping cDNA clones that code for the entire open reading frame of chicken BAFF (chBAFF), which contains a predicted transmembrane domain and a putative furin protease cleavage site like its mammalian counterparts. The amino acid identity between soluble chicken and human BAFF is 76%, considerably higher than for most other known cytokines. The chBAFF gene is most strongly expressed in the bursa of Fabricius. Soluble recombinant chBAFF produced by human 293T cells interacted with the mammalian cell-surface receptors TACI, BCMA and BAFF-R. It bound to chicken B cells, but not to other lymphocytes, and it promoted the survival of splenic chicken B cells in culture. Furthermore, bacterially expressed chBAFF induced the selective expansion of B cells in the spleen and cecal tonsils when administered to young chicks. Our results suggest that like its mammalian counterpart, chBAFF plays an important role in survival and/or proliferation of chicken B cells.
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Résumé tout public : Le développement du diabète de type II et de l'obésité est causé par l'interaction entre des gènes de susceptibilité et des facteurs environnementaux, en particulier une alimentation riche en calories et une activité physique insuffisante. Afín d'évaluer le rôle de l'alimentation en absence d'hétérogénéité génétique, nous avons nourri une lignée de souris génétiquement pure avec un régime extrêmement gras. Ce régime a conduit à l'établissement de différents phénotypes parmi ces souris, soit : un diabète et une obésité (ObD), un diabète mais pas d'obésité (LD) ou ni un diabète, ni une obésité (LnD). Nous avons fait l'hypothèse que ces adaptations différentes au stress nutritionnel induit par le régime gras étaient dues à l'établissement de programmes génétiques différents dans les principaux organes impliqués dans le maintien de l'équilibre énergétique. Afin d'évaluer cette hypothèse, nous avons développé une puce à ADN contenant approximativement 700 gènes du métabolisme. Cette puce à ADN, en rendant possible la mesure simultanée de l'expression de nombreux gènes, nous a permis d'établir les profils d'expression des gènes caractéristiques de chaque groupe de souris nourries avec le régime gras, dans le foie et le muscle squelettique. Les données que nous avons obtenues à partir de ces profils d'expression ont montré que des changements d'expression marqués se produisaient dans le foie et le muscle entre les différents groupes de souris nourries avec le régime gras. Dans l'ensemble, ces changements suggèrent que l'établissement du diabète de type II et de l'obésité induits par un régime gras est associé à une synthèse accrue de lipides par le foie et à un flux augmenté de lipides du foie jusqu'à la périphérie (muscles squelettiques). Dans un deuxième temps, ces profils d'expression des gènes ont été utilisés pour sélectionner un sous-ensemble de gènes suffisamment discriminants pour pouvoir distinguer entre les différents phénotypes. Ce sous-ensemble de gènes nous a permis de construire un classificateur phénotypique capable de prédire avec une précision relativement élevée le phénotype des souris. Dans le futur, de tels « prédicteurs » basés sur l'expression des gènes pourraient servir d'outils pour le diagnostic de pathologies liées au métabolisme. Summary: Aetiology of obesity and type II diabetes is multifactorial, involving both genetic and environmental factors, such as calory-rich diets or lack of exercice. Genetically homogenous C57BL/6J mice fed a high fat diet (HFD) up to nine months develop differential adaptation, becoming either obese and diabetic (ObD) or remaining lean in the presence (LD) or absence (LnD) of diabetes development. Each phenotype is associated with diverse metabolic alterations, which may result from diverse molecular adaptations of key organs involved in the control of energy homeostasis. In this study, we evaluated if specific patterns of gene expression could be associated with each different phenotype of HFD mice in the liver and the skeletal muscles. To perform this, we constructed a metabolic cDNA microarray containing approximately 700 cDNA representing genes involved in the main metabolic pathways of energy homeostasis. Our data indicate that the development of diet-induced obesity and type II diabetes is linked to some defects in lipid metabolism, involving a preserved hepatic lipogenesis and increased levels of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL). In skeletal muscles, an increase in fatty acids uptake, as suggested by the increased expression of lipoprotein lipase, would contribute to the increased level of insulin resistance observed in the ObD mice. Conversely, both groups of lean mice showed a reduced expression in lipogenic genes, particularly stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (Scd-1), a gene linked to sensitivity to diet-induced obesity. Secondly, we identified a subset of genes from expression profiles that classified with relative accuracy the different groups of mice. Such classifiers may be used in the future as diagnostic tools of each metabolic state in each tissue. Résumé Développement d'une puce à ADN métabolique et application à l'étude d'un modèle murin d'obésité et de diabète de type II L'étiologie de l'obésité et du diabète de type II est multifactorielle, impliquant à la fois des facteurs génétiques et environnementaux, tels que des régimes riches en calories ou un manque d'exercice physique. Des souris génétiquement homogènes C57BL/6J nourries avec un régime extrêmement gras (HFD) pendant 9 mois développent une adaptation métabolique différentielle, soit en devenant obèses et diabétiques (ObD), soit en restant minces en présence (LD) ou en absence (LnD) d'un diabète. Chaque phénotype est associé à diverses altérations métaboliques, qui pourraient résulter de diverses adaptations moléculaires des organes impliqués dans le contrôle de l'homéostasie énergétique. Dans cette étude, nous avons évalué si des profils d'expression des gènes dans le foie et le muscle squelettique pouvaient être associés à chacun des phénotypes de souris HFD. Dans ce but, nous avons développé une puce à ADN métabolique contenant approximativement 700 ADNc représentant des gènes impliqués dans les différentes voies métaboliques de l'homéostasie énergétique. Nos données indiquent que le développement de l'obésité et du diabète de type II induit par un régime gras est associé à certains défauts du métabolisme lipidique, impliquant une lipogenèse hépatique préservée et des niveaux de lipoprotéines de très faible densité (VLDL) augmentés. Au niveau du muscle squelettique, une augmentation du captage des acides gras, suggéré par l'expression augmentée de la lipoprotéine lipase, contribuerait à expliquer la résistance à l'insuline plus marquée observée chez les souris ObD. Au contraire, les souris minces ont montré une réduction marquée de l'expression des gènes lipogéniques, en particulier de la stéaroyl-CoA désaturase 1 (scd-1), un gène associé à la sensibilité au développement de l'obésité par un régime gras. Dans un deuxième temps, nous avons identifié un sous-ensemble de gènes à partir des profils d'expression, qui permettent de classifier avec une précision relativement élevée les différents groupes de souris. De tels classificateurs pourraient être utilisés dans le futur comme outils pour le diagnostic de l'état métabolique d'un tissu donné.