I haven't really been able to follow what exactly you're doing. Maybe you could lay out your overarching plan, and maybe describe what everything in one row of the table on this webpage means?
I haven't really been able to follow what exactly you're doing. Maybe you could lay out your overarching plan, and maybe describe what everything in one row of the table on this webpage means?
Will try to give a fuller writeup a go some other time when I’m up to it. But it’s basically just GenHancer info on promoters and enhancers (see the Genomics section on a GeneCards page) for DecodeME genes with links to view the locations on the DecodeME LocusZoom to see if they’re relevant.I haven't really been able to follow what exactly you're doing. Maybe you could lay out your overarching plan, and maybe describe what everything in one row of the table on this webpage means?
Ah, ok, so the idea is, if there are significant hits near a gene, plus significant hits near multiple enhancers or promoters which encourage expression of that gene, it might be more likely to be relevant.But it’s basically just GenHancer info on promoters and enhancers (see the Genomics section on a GeneCards page) for DecodeME genes with links to view the locations on the DecodeME LocusZoom to see if they’re relevant.
Yeah, it was meant to be a quick ‘oh this info on regulatory elements looks interesting, I wonder if I can knock something up to make it easy to link to and check if there are correlations to changes in the DecodeME data for the candidate genes, maybe it will tell us something’. And then got more complicated…Ah, ok, so the idea is, if there are significant hits near a gene, plus significant hits near multiple enhancers or promoters which encourage expression of that gene, it might be more likely to be relevant.
I just brushed up on the basics of what promoters and enhancers are with this video: Promoters and Enhancers
I think this is a really interesting connection to the PVN because the PVN apparantly mediates osmoregulation and so many pwME have issues with dehydration, excessive thirst, exessive and frequent urination (and sometimes in PEM the opposite - I need to drink loads but barely pee at all) etc. It seems like something is driving the fluid regulation of pwME haywire so this could be an important clue imo.2. NEGR1 Function: NEGR1 maintains the structural integrity and synaptic connections of neurons in the PVN.
Osmoregulation stuck out to me:
'Osmoregulation is the active regulation of the osmotic pressure of an organism's body fluids, detected by osmoreceptors, to maintain the homeostasis of the organism's water content; that is, it maintains the fluid balance and the concentration of electrolytes (salts in solution which in this case is represented by body fluid) to keep the body fluids from becoming too diluted or concentrated.'
Osmoregulation - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
If it was specifically the PVN, I think it'd be more interesting. But it seems like what you quoted is an AI mentioning PVN linking to NEGR1 because it's the area of interest that was asked about, while in reality NEGR1 may be involved everywhere in the brain. And if the question was about any other brain region, it'd say NEGR1 maintains the synaptic connections there too.I think this is a really interesting connection to the PVN
Oh right, my bad!If it was specifically the PVN, I think it'd be more interesting. But it seems like what you quoted is an AI mentioning PVN linking to NEGR1 because it's the area of interest that was asked about, while in reality NEGR1 may be involved everywhere in the brain. And if the question was about any other brain region, it'd say NEGR1 maintains the synaptic connections there too.