Back to Search Start Over

A Multi-Omic Huntington’s Disease Transgenic Sheep-Model Database for Investigating Disease Pathogenesis

Authors :
Mears, Emily R.
Handley, Renee R.
Grant, Matthew J.
Reid, Suzanne J.
Day, Benjamin T.
Rudiger, Skye R.
McLaughlan, Clive J.
Verma, Paul J.
Bawden, Simon C.
Patassini, Stefano
Unwin, Richard D.
Cooper, Garth J.S.
Gusella, James F.
MacDonald, Marcy E.
Brauning, Rudiger
Maclean, Paul
Pearson, John F.
Waldvogel, Henry J.
Faull, Richard L.M.
Snell, Russell G.
Source :
Journal of Huntington's Disease; November 2021, Vol. 10 Issue: 4 p423-434, 12p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The pathological mechanism of cellular dysfunction and death in Huntington’s disease (HD) is not well defined. Our transgenic HD sheep model (OVT73) was generated to investigate these mechanisms and for therapeutic testing. One particular cohort of animals has undergone focused investigation resulting in a large interrelated multi-omic dataset, with statistically significant changes observed comparing OVT73 and control ‘omic’ profiles and reported in literature. Here we make this dataset publicly available for the advancement of HD pathogenic mechanism discovery. To enable investigation in a user-friendly format, we integrated seven multi-omic datasets from a cohort of 5-year-old OVT73 (n = 6) and control (n = 6) sheep into a single database utilising the programming language R. It includes high-throughput transcriptomic, metabolomic and proteomic data from blood, brain, and other tissues. We present the ‘multi-omic’ HD sheep database as a queryable web-based platform that can be used by the wider HD research community (https://hdsheep.cer.auckland.ac.nz/). The database is supported with a suite of simple automated statistical analysis functions for rapid exploratory analyses. We present examples of its use that validates the integrity relative to results previously reported. The data may also be downloaded for user determined analysis. We propose the use of this online database as a hypothesis generator and method to confirm/refute findings made from patient samples and alternate model systems, to expand our understanding of HD pathogenesis. Importantly, additional tissue samples are available for further investigation of this cohort.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18796397 and 18796400
Volume :
10
Issue :
4
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Huntington's Disease
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs57480936
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3233/JHD-210482