Proteomics: Quantitative and physical mapping of cellular proteins

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Abstract

Genome sequencing provides a wealth of information on predicted gene products (mostly proteins), but the majority of these have no known function. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry have, coupled with searches in protein and EST databases, transformed the protein-identification process. The proteome is the expressed protein complement of a genome and proteomics is functional genomics at the protein level. Proteomics can be divided into expression proteomics, the study of global changes in protein expression, and cell-map proteomics, the systematic study of protein-protein interactions through the isolation of protein complexes.

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Blackstock, W. P., & Weir, M. P. (1999, March 1). Proteomics: Quantitative and physical mapping of cellular proteins. Trends in Biotechnology. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0167-7799(98)01245-1

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