Databases for antibody-based proteomics

Humans are believed to have ~20,500 protein-coding genes andmuch effort has over the last years been put into the characterizationand localization of the encoded proteins in order to understand theirfunctions. One such effort is the Human Proteome Resource (HPR)project, started in Sweden 2003 with t...

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Main Author: Björling, Erik
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: KTH, Skolan för bioteknologi (BIO) 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-9658
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7415-161-9
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-96582013-01-08T13:06:20ZDatabases for antibody-based proteomicsengBjörling, ErikKTH, Skolan för bioteknologi (BIO)Stockholm : KTH2008proteomicsantibodiesdatabasebiomarkerwebsiteBioengineeringBioteknikHumans are believed to have ~20,500 protein-coding genes andmuch effort has over the last years been put into the characterizationand localization of the encoded proteins in order to understand theirfunctions. One such effort is the Human Proteome Resource (HPR)project, started in Sweden 2003 with the aim to generate specificantibodies to each human protein and to use those antibodies toanalyze the human proteome by screening human tissues and cells.The work reported in this thesis deals with structuring of data fromantibody-based proteomics assays, with focus on the importance ofaggregating and presenting data in a way that is easy to apprehend.The goals were to model and build databases for collecting, searchingand analyzing data coming out of the large-scale HPR project and tomake all collected data publicly available. A public website, theHuman Protein Atlas, was developed giving all end-users in thescientific community access to the HPR database with proteinexpression data. In 2008, the Human Protein Atlas was released in its4th version containing more than 6000 antibodies, covering more than25% of the human proteins. All the collected protein expression datais searchable on the public website. End-users can query for proteinsthat show high expression in one tissue and no expression in anotherand possibly find tissue specific biomarkers. Queries can also beconstructed to find proteins with different expression levels in normalvs. cancer tissues. The proteins found by such a query could identifypotential biomarkers for cancer that could be used as diagnosticmarkers and maybe even be involved in cancer therapy in the future.Validation of antibodies is important in order to get reliable resultsfrom different assays. It has been noted that some antibodies arereliable in certain assays but not in others and therefore anotherpublicly available database, the Antibodypedia, has been createdwhere any antibody producer can submit their binders together withthe validation data in order for end users to purchase the bestantibody for their protein target and their intended assay. QC 20100708Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-9658urn:isbn:978-91-7415-161-9Trita-BIO-Report, 1654-2312 ; 2008:24application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic proteomics
antibodies
database
biomarker
website
Bioengineering
Bioteknik
spellingShingle proteomics
antibodies
database
biomarker
website
Bioengineering
Bioteknik
Björling, Erik
Databases for antibody-based proteomics
description Humans are believed to have ~20,500 protein-coding genes andmuch effort has over the last years been put into the characterizationand localization of the encoded proteins in order to understand theirfunctions. One such effort is the Human Proteome Resource (HPR)project, started in Sweden 2003 with the aim to generate specificantibodies to each human protein and to use those antibodies toanalyze the human proteome by screening human tissues and cells.The work reported in this thesis deals with structuring of data fromantibody-based proteomics assays, with focus on the importance ofaggregating and presenting data in a way that is easy to apprehend.The goals were to model and build databases for collecting, searchingand analyzing data coming out of the large-scale HPR project and tomake all collected data publicly available. A public website, theHuman Protein Atlas, was developed giving all end-users in thescientific community access to the HPR database with proteinexpression data. In 2008, the Human Protein Atlas was released in its4th version containing more than 6000 antibodies, covering more than25% of the human proteins. All the collected protein expression datais searchable on the public website. End-users can query for proteinsthat show high expression in one tissue and no expression in anotherand possibly find tissue specific biomarkers. Queries can also beconstructed to find proteins with different expression levels in normalvs. cancer tissues. The proteins found by such a query could identifypotential biomarkers for cancer that could be used as diagnosticmarkers and maybe even be involved in cancer therapy in the future.Validation of antibodies is important in order to get reliable resultsfrom different assays. It has been noted that some antibodies arereliable in certain assays but not in others and therefore anotherpublicly available database, the Antibodypedia, has been createdwhere any antibody producer can submit their binders together withthe validation data in order for end users to purchase the bestantibody for their protein target and their intended assay. === QC 20100708
author Björling, Erik
author_facet Björling, Erik
author_sort Björling, Erik
title Databases for antibody-based proteomics
title_short Databases for antibody-based proteomics
title_full Databases for antibody-based proteomics
title_fullStr Databases for antibody-based proteomics
title_full_unstemmed Databases for antibody-based proteomics
title_sort databases for antibody-based proteomics
publisher KTH, Skolan för bioteknologi (BIO)
publishDate 2008
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-9658
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7415-161-9
work_keys_str_mv AT bjorlingerik databasesforantibodybasedproteomics
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