TY - JOUR
T1 - Progress on Identifying and Characterizing the Human Proteome
T2 - 2018 Metrics from the HUPO Human Proteome Project
AU - Omenn, Gilbert S.
AU - Lane, Lydie
AU - Overall, Christopher M.
AU - Corrales, Fernando J.
AU - Schwenk, Jochen M.
AU - Paik, Young Ki
AU - Van Eyk, Jennifer E.
AU - Liu, Siqi
AU - Snyder, Michael
AU - Baker, Mark S.
AU - Deutsch, Eric W.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/12/7
Y1 - 2018/12/7
N2 - The Human Proteome Project (HPP) annually reports on progress throughout the field in credibly identifying and characterizing the human protein parts list and making proteomics an integral part of multiomics studies in medicine and the life sciences. NeXtProt release 2018-01-17, the baseline for this sixth annual HPP special issue of the Journal of Proteome Research, contains 17470 PE1 proteins, 89% of all neXtProt predicted PE1-4 proteins, up from 17008 in release 2017-01-23 and 13975 in release 2012-02-24. Conversely, the number of neXtProt PE2,3,4 missing proteins has been reduced from 2949 to 2579 to 2186 over the past two years. Of the PE1 proteins, 16092 are based on mass spectrometry results, and 1378 on other kinds of protein studies, notably protein-protein interaction findings. PeptideAtlas has 15798 canonical proteins, up 625 over the past year, including 269 from SUMOylation studies. The largest reason for missing proteins is low abundance. Meanwhile, the Human Protein Atlas has released its Cell Atlas, Pathology Atlas, and updated Tissue Atlas, and is applying recommendations from the International Working Group on Antibody Validation. Finally, there is progress using the quantitative multiplex organ-specific popular proteins targeted proteomics approach in various disease categories.
AB - The Human Proteome Project (HPP) annually reports on progress throughout the field in credibly identifying and characterizing the human protein parts list and making proteomics an integral part of multiomics studies in medicine and the life sciences. NeXtProt release 2018-01-17, the baseline for this sixth annual HPP special issue of the Journal of Proteome Research, contains 17470 PE1 proteins, 89% of all neXtProt predicted PE1-4 proteins, up from 17008 in release 2017-01-23 and 13975 in release 2012-02-24. Conversely, the number of neXtProt PE2,3,4 missing proteins has been reduced from 2949 to 2579 to 2186 over the past two years. Of the PE1 proteins, 16092 are based on mass spectrometry results, and 1378 on other kinds of protein studies, notably protein-protein interaction findings. PeptideAtlas has 15798 canonical proteins, up 625 over the past year, including 269 from SUMOylation studies. The largest reason for missing proteins is low abundance. Meanwhile, the Human Protein Atlas has released its Cell Atlas, Pathology Atlas, and updated Tissue Atlas, and is applying recommendations from the International Working Group on Antibody Validation. Finally, there is progress using the quantitative multiplex organ-specific popular proteins targeted proteomics approach in various disease categories.
KW - Biology and Disease-driven HPP (B/D-HPP)
KW - Chromosome-centric HPP (C-HPP)
KW - HPP Guidelines
KW - Human Proteome Organization (HUPO)
KW - Human Proteome Project (HPP)
KW - PeptideAtlas
KW - metrics
KW - missing proteins
KW - neXtProt
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85052309961&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.jproteome.8b00441
DO - 10.1021/acs.jproteome.8b00441
M3 - Review article
C2 - 30099871
AN - SCOPUS:85052309961
SN - 1535-3893
VL - 17
SP - 4031
EP - 4041
JO - Journal of Proteome Research
JF - Journal of Proteome Research
IS - 12
ER -