There are several sensitive methods for investigating gene expression on a large scale.
Microarrays are widely used for rapid, high-throughput screening of differential gene expression for biological, medical and clinical research and the collective data from these studies is available in several public databases (e.g., EMBL-EBI Expression Atlas, GTex and Gene Expression Omnibus).
Microarrays rely upon the direct hybridization of specific probes to known target RNA molecules in the sample and the results are provided as a numerical count of each RNA-bound probe.
While these methods are powerful tools for studying the response to treatment of a cellular model in terms of known RNA targets, they offer little opportunity for discovery of novel transcripts or the unanticipated but potentially important changes in the expression of noncoding transcripts.