News & Views
Milestone for the Analysis of Human Proteomes
Feb 26 2017
Researchers led by the Technical University of Munich (TUM) have reported on the synthesis of a library of more than 330,000 reference peptides representing essentially all canonical proteins of the human proteome - a major milestone in the ProteomeTools project, which aims at translating human proteome information into new molecular and digital tools.
The consortium of TUM, JPT Peptide Technologies (JPT), SAP and Thermo Fisher Scientific has made the vast quantity of data freely available to the scientific community via the data analytics platform ProteomicsDB (www.proteomicsdb.org) and the data repository PRIDE (www.ebi.ac.uk/pride) to enable scientists and to foster collaboration around the globe.
Going forward, the ProteomeTools project www.proteometools.org) will generate a further one million peptides and corresponding spectra with a focus on splice variants, cancer mutations and post-translational modifications such as phosphorylation, acetylation and ubiquitinylation.
“ProteomeTools was started as a collaborative effort bringing together academic and industrial partners to make important contributions to the field of proteomics. It is gratifying to see that this work is now producing a wealth of significant results,” said Professor Bernhard Kuster, Chair of Proteomics and Bioanalysis at TUM and coordinator of the project. “Representing the human proteome by tandem mass spectra of synthetic peptides alleviates some of the current issues with protein identification and quantification. The libraries of peptides and spectra now allow us to develop new and improve upon existing hardware, software, workflows and reagents for proteomics. Making all the data available to the public provides a wonderful opportunity to exploit this resource beyond what a single laboratory can do. We are now reaching out to the community to suggest interesting sets of peptides to make and measure as well as to create LC-MS/MS data on platforms not available to the ProteomeTools consortium.”
The three year collaborative project is funded in part by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), JPT Peptide Technologies, SAP, Thermo Fisher Scientific and TUM.
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