A human proteome detection and quantitation project.

Mol Cell Proteomics
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

The lack of sensitive, specific, multiplexable assays for most human proteins is the major technical barrier impeding development of candidate biomarkers into clinically useful tests. Recent progress in mass spectrometry-based assays for proteotypic peptides, particularly those with specific affinity peptide enrichment, offers a systematic and economical path to comprehensive quantitative coverage of the human proteome. A complete suite of assays, e.g. two peptides from the protein product of each of the approximately 20,500 human genes (here termed the human Proteome Detection and Quantitation project), would enable rapid and systematic verification of candidate biomarkers and lay a quantitative foundation for subsequent efforts to define the larger universe of splice variants, post-translational modifications, protein-protein interactions, and tissue localization.

Year of Publication
2009
Journal
Mol Cell Proteomics
Volume
8
Issue
5
Pages
883-6
Date Published
2009 May
ISSN
1535-9484
URL
DOI
10.1074/mcp.R800015-MCP200
PubMed ID
19131327
PubMed Central ID
PMC2689772
Links
Grant list
U24 CA126476 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
1U24 CA126476-02 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States