The orphan nuclear receptor Nurr1 has been shown to be critical for the development of ventral midbrain dopaminergic neurons. Consequently, the development of ES cells overexpressing Nurr1 has raised hope for the development of cell replacement therapies for Parkinson's Disease to replace degenerated dopaminergic neurons. However, the molecular consequences of Nurr1 on gene expression in these cells remain unknown. To address this, stable, clonal, c17.2 neural stem cell lines were established that overexpressed the orphan nuclear receptor Nurr1 (clone 42 & clone 48) or parental control cell line (puroB & puroD, respectively). Experiment Overall Design: Stable neural stem cell lines were grown in proliferating conditions and matched for further microarray analysis based on their similar proliferation rates: Experiment Overall Design: clone 42(c42) vs. puroB(pB) Experiment Overall Design: clone 42(c48) vs. puroD(pD)