Genome Biology

official impact factor 6.89

Open Access Highly Access

Sex-specific expression of alternative transcripts in Drosophila

Lauren M McIntyre*, Lisa M Bono, Anne Genissel, Rick Westerman, Damion Junk, Marina Telonis-Scott, Larry Harshman, Marta L Wayne, Artyom Kopp and Sergey V Nuzhdin

Genome Biology 2006, 7:R79 doi:10.1186/gb-2006-7-8-r79

Accesses  

  • Last 30 days: 91 accesses
  • Last year: 1039 accesses
  • All time: 9075 accesses

Cited by

BioMed Central: 5 citations

Research article   Open Access

Generalized shrinkage F-like statistics for testing an interaction term in gene expression analysis in the presence of heteroscedasticity

Jie Yang, George Casella, Lauren M McIntyre BMC Bioinformatics 2011, 12:427 (1 November 2011)

Research article   Open Access

Differential gene expression in male and female rainbow trout embryos prior to the onset of gross morphological differentiation of the gonads

Matthew C Hale, Peng Xu, Julie Scardina, Paul A Wheeler, Gary H Thorgaard, Krista M Nichols BMC Genomics 2011, 12:404 (8 August 2011)

Research article   Open Access Highly Accessed

Somatic sex-specific transcriptome differences in Drosophila revealed by whole transcriptome sequencing

Peter L Chang, Joseph P Dunham, Sergey V Nuzhdin, Michelle N Arbeitman BMC Genomics 2011, 12:364 (14 July 2011)

Research article   Open Access Highly Accessed

Sex-specific population structure, natural selection, and linkage disequilibrium in a wild bird population as revealed by genome-wide microsatellite analyses

Meng-Hua Li, Juha Merilä BMC Evolutionary Biology 2010, 10:66 (8 March 2010)

Research article   Open Access

Natural genetic variation in transcriptome reflects network structure inferred with major effect mutations: insulin/TOR and associated phenotypes in Drosophila melanogaster

Sergey V Nuzhdin, Jennifer A Brisson, Andrew Pickering, Marta L Wayne, Lawrence G Harshman, Lauren M McIntyre BMC Genomics 2009, 10:124 (24 March 2009)

Naturally-occurring variation in Drosophila insulin/TOR signaling pathway genes affects expression and phenotypes similarly to gene knockouts, but the sparse picture of regulatory networks derived from knockout studies on inbred lines is probably oversimplified.