PEPPI: a peptidomic database of human protein isoforms for proteomics experiments

  • Zhou A
  • Zhang F
  • Chen J
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Abstract

Protein isoform generation, which may derive from alternative splicing, genetic polymorphism, and posttranslational modification, is an essential source of achieving molecular diversity by eukaryotic cells. Previous studies have shown that protein isoforms play critical roles in disease diagnosis, risk assessment, sub-typing, prognosis, and treatment outcome predictions. Understanding the types, presence, and abundance of different protein isoforms in different cellular and physiological conditions is a major task in functional proteomics, and may pave ways to molecular biomarker discovery of human diseases. In tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) based proteomics analysis, peptide peaks with exact matches to protein sequence records in the proteomics database may be identified with mass spectrometry (MS) search software. However, due to limited annotation and poor coverage of protein isoforms in proteomics databases, high throughput protein isoform identifications, particularly those arising from alternative splicing and genetic polymorphism, have not been possible.

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Zhou, A., Zhang, F., & Chen, J. Y. (2010). PEPPI: a peptidomic database of human protein isoforms for proteomics experiments. BMC Bioinformatics, 11(S6). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-11-s6-s7

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