TY - JOUR
T1 - Evaluation of PE5 Entries on the Human Proteome Project Target List
AU - Zheng, Clarissa
AU - Andken, Marie
AU - Mudge, Jonathan M.
AU - Magrane, Michele
AU - Orchard, Sandra
AU - Sun, Zhi
AU - Deutsch, Eric W.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025/1/1
Y1 - 2025/1/1
N2 - One aim of the international Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) Human Proteome Project (HPP) is to obtain high-confidence translation evidence for every human protein-coding gene established in its target list of 19,433 entries based on the protein-coding genes from Ensembl-GENCODE. However, 76 are annotated in UniProtKB (as of release 2024_06) with PE5, indicating skepticism in the protein’s existence from a manual curator, so it is unclear if these entries belong in the HPP target list. Here, we review these 76 entries by assembling evidence from the literature, reference databases, and genome alignments with other species to conclude whether these entries should be freed from their PE5 status to become annotated with PE1-4 in UniProtKB. We find that 17 of these have credible translation evidence and therefore should be upgraded to PE1. Another 15 lack translation evidence but have transcription evidence, the evolutionary hallmarks of protein-coding genes, and are presumed to produce functional proteins. 41 have no translational or transcriptional evidence, although they still bear the evolutionary hallmarks of protein-coding genes; currently, it remains unclear if these are protein-coding, so their representation becomes a matter of policy. Only 3 entries still seem best categorized as PE5 and excluded from the HUPO-HPP target list.
AB - One aim of the international Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) Human Proteome Project (HPP) is to obtain high-confidence translation evidence for every human protein-coding gene established in its target list of 19,433 entries based on the protein-coding genes from Ensembl-GENCODE. However, 76 are annotated in UniProtKB (as of release 2024_06) with PE5, indicating skepticism in the protein’s existence from a manual curator, so it is unclear if these entries belong in the HPP target list. Here, we review these 76 entries by assembling evidence from the literature, reference databases, and genome alignments with other species to conclude whether these entries should be freed from their PE5 status to become annotated with PE1-4 in UniProtKB. We find that 17 of these have credible translation evidence and therefore should be upgraded to PE1. Another 15 lack translation evidence but have transcription evidence, the evolutionary hallmarks of protein-coding genes, and are presumed to produce functional proteins. 41 have no translational or transcriptional evidence, although they still bear the evolutionary hallmarks of protein-coding genes; currently, it remains unclear if these are protein-coding, so their representation becomes a matter of policy. Only 3 entries still seem best categorized as PE5 and excluded from the HUPO-HPP target list.
KW - HUPO
KW - human proteome
KW - human proteome project
KW - protein evidence
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105008145022&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.jproteome.5c00167
DO - 10.1021/acs.jproteome.5c00167
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105008145022
SN - 1535-3893
JO - Journal of Proteome Research
JF - Journal of Proteome Research
ER -