Human Gene Set: GSE5099_UNSTIM_VS_MCSF_TREATED_MONOCYTE_DAY7_DN


Standard name GSE5099_UNSTIM_VS_MCSF_TREATED_MONOCYTE_DAY7_DN
Systematic name M6585
Brief description Genes down-regulated in unstimulated monocytes versus macrophages incubated with CSF1 [GeneID=435] at day 7.
Full description or abstract Monocytes mature tom acrophages in the presence of the lineage determining cytokine M-CSF. They can be further polarized into M1 or M2 macrophages with distinct functional properties. We used microarrays to detail the global programme of gene expression underlying macrophage maturation and polarization and identified distinct classes of up-regulated genes during this process.
Collection C7: Immunologic Signature
      IMMUNESIGDB: ImmuneSigDB
Source publication Pubmed 17082649   Authors: Martinez FO,Gordon S,Locati M,Mantovani A
Exact source GSE5099_3804_200_DN
Related gene sets (show 11 additional gene sets from the source publication)

(show 8 gene sets from the same authors)
External links
Filtered by similarity ?
Source species Homo sapiens
Contributed by Jernej Godec (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
Source platform or
identifier namespace
HUMAN_GENE_SYMBOL
Dataset references (show 1 datasets)
Download gene set format: grp | gmt | xml | json | TSV metadata
Compute overlaps ? (show collections to investigate for overlap with this gene set)
Compendia expression profiles ? NG-CHM interactive heatmaps
(Please note that clustering takes a few seconds)
GTEx compendium
Human tissue compendium (Novartis)
Global Cancer Map (Broad Institute)
NCI-60 cell lines (National Cancer Institute)

Legacy heatmaps (PNG)
GTEx compendium
Human tissue compendium (Novartis)
Global Cancer Map (Broad Institute)
NCI-60 cell lines (National Cancer Institute)
Advanced query Further investigate these 200 genes
Gene families ? Categorize these 200 genes by gene family
Show members (show 200 source identifiers mapped to 200 genes)
Version history 7.3: Moved to ImmuneSigDB sub-collection.

See MSigDB license terms here. Please note that certain gene sets have special access terms.