A large portion of human proteins are referred to as missing proteins, defined as protein-coding genes that lack experimental data on the protein level due to factors such as temporal expression, expression in tissues that are difficult to sample, or they actually do not encode functional proteins. In the present investigation, an integrated omics approach was used for identification and exploration of missing proteins. Transcriptomics data from three different sourcesthe Human Protein Atlas (HPA), the GTEx consortium, and the FANTOM5 consortiumwere used as a starting point to identify genes selectively expressed in specialized tissues. Complementing the analysis with profiling on more specific tissues based on immunohistochemistry allo...
© 2020 Elsevier Inc. Determining protein levels in each tissue and how they compare with RNA levels ...
To construct a complete map of the human proteome landscape is a vital part of the total understandi...
An attractive path forward in proteomics is to experimen-tally annotate the human protein complement...
Experimental evidence for the entire human proteome has been defined in the Human Proteome Project, ...
INTRODUCTIONResolving the molecular details of proteome variation in the different tissues and organ...
Global classification of the human proteins with regards to spatial expression patterns across organ...
Chromosome-centric Human Proteome Project aims at identifying and characterizing protein products en...
Investigations of missing proteins (MPs) are being endorsed by many bioanalytical strategies. We pro...
The current catalogue of the human proteome is not yet complete, as experimental proteomics evidence...
In the quest for “missing proteins” (MPs), the proteins encoded by the human genome still lacking ev...
Advances in molecular profiling have opened up the possibility to map the expression of genes in cel...
With the improvement of high-throughput technologies during the last decade, several studies explori...
Proteins are essential building blocks in every living cell, and since the complete human genome was...
In the quest for “missing proteins” (MPs), the proteins encoded by the human genome still lacking ev...
The availability of proteomics datasets in the public domain, and in the PRIDE database, in particul...
© 2020 Elsevier Inc. Determining protein levels in each tissue and how they compare with RNA levels ...
To construct a complete map of the human proteome landscape is a vital part of the total understandi...
An attractive path forward in proteomics is to experimen-tally annotate the human protein complement...
Experimental evidence for the entire human proteome has been defined in the Human Proteome Project, ...
INTRODUCTIONResolving the molecular details of proteome variation in the different tissues and organ...
Global classification of the human proteins with regards to spatial expression patterns across organ...
Chromosome-centric Human Proteome Project aims at identifying and characterizing protein products en...
Investigations of missing proteins (MPs) are being endorsed by many bioanalytical strategies. We pro...
The current catalogue of the human proteome is not yet complete, as experimental proteomics evidence...
In the quest for “missing proteins” (MPs), the proteins encoded by the human genome still lacking ev...
Advances in molecular profiling have opened up the possibility to map the expression of genes in cel...
With the improvement of high-throughput technologies during the last decade, several studies explori...
Proteins are essential building blocks in every living cell, and since the complete human genome was...
In the quest for “missing proteins” (MPs), the proteins encoded by the human genome still lacking ev...
The availability of proteomics datasets in the public domain, and in the PRIDE database, in particul...
© 2020 Elsevier Inc. Determining protein levels in each tissue and how they compare with RNA levels ...
To construct a complete map of the human proteome landscape is a vital part of the total understandi...
An attractive path forward in proteomics is to experimen-tally annotate the human protein complement...