Mouse Brain Transcriptomic Profiles for High-Altitude Cerebral Injury and Oxygen Therapy
by Xiaojie Hu·Updated 2mo ago
45.6 KB1files
Available on 1 platform
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Description
A 45.6 KB PDF data sheet from a study by Xiaojie Hu, last updated April 2026, details RNA sequencing results from a mouse model of high-altitude cerebral injury. The study compares the effects of normobaric and hyperbaric oxygen therapy on gene expression, oxidative stress, and neuroinflammation pathways. Data includes results from RNA-seq, Western blot, immunofluorescence, and ELISA analyses.
Use Cases
Analyze transcriptomic changes in response to hypoxia based on RNA-seq data mentioned in the description
Compare the efficacy of different oxygen therapies based on pathway enrichment analysis for NF-κB, PI3K-AKT, and IL-17 signaling
Validate oxidative stress markers based on measured levels of SOD, MDA, GSH, and NO
Investigate neuroinflammatory responses based on cytokine levels (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α) and glial cell activation data
Strengths
Data is associated with a detailed experimental protocol using a simulated altitude of 7,000m and defined oxygen therapy regimens
Includes multi-modal validation through RNA-seq, histopathology, protein analysis, and cytokine assays
Released under a permissive CC-BY-4.0 license
Limitations
Row count and column-level documentation are absent; field semantics must be inferred after download
The dataset is very small at 45.6 KB, indicating limited scope, likely containing summary results rather than raw sequencing data
Data is contained within a PDF, which may require extraction for computational analysis
Provenance
Source
Xiaojie Hu via figshare
Collection Method
Generated from a controlled laboratory study using a hypobaric hypoxia chamber on mice, followed by transcriptomic and biochemical analysis.
Time Range
The study period is not specified, but the dataset was updated in April 2026.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-04 13 05:49:14
Geography
Not specified; likely from a research institution's laboratory.
Data is provided as a PDF file, not in a structured tabular format like CSV.