A repository of assays to quantify 10,000 human proteins by SWATH-MS

George Rosenberger(University of Zurich), Ching Chiek Koh(Heidelberg University), Tiannan Guo(ETH Zurich), Hannes Röst(University of Zurich), Petri Kouvonen(ETH Zurich), Ben C. Collins(ETH Zurich), Moritz Heusel(University of Zurich), Yansheng Liu(ETH Zurich), Étienne Caron(ETH Zurich), Anton Vichalkovski(ETH Zurich), Marco Faini(ETH Zurich), Olga T. Schubert(University of Zurich), Pouya Faridi(Shiraz University of Medical Sciences), H. Alexander Ebhardt(ETH Zurich), Mariette Matondo(ETH Zurich), Henry Lam(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Samuel L. Bader(Institute for Systems Biology), David Campbell(Institute for Systems Biology), Eric W. Deutsch(Institute for Systems Biology), Robert L. Moritz(Institute for Systems Biology), Stephen Tate(Spinal Cord Injury BC), Ruedi Aebersold(University of Zurich)
Scientific Data
September 15, 2014
Cited by 458Open Access
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Abstract

Mass spectrometry is the method of choice for deep and reliable exploration of the (human) proteome. Targeted mass spectrometry reliably detects and quantifies pre-determined sets of proteins in a complex biological matrix and is used in studies that rely on the quantitatively accurate and reproducible measurement of proteins across multiple samples. It requires the one-time, a priori generation of a specific measurement assay for each targeted protein. SWATH-MS is a mass spectrometric method that combines data-independent acquisition (DIA) and targeted data analysis and vastly extends the throughput of proteins that can be targeted in a sample compared to selected reaction monitoring (SRM). Here we present a compendium of highly specific assays covering more than 10,000 human proteins and enabling their targeted analysis in SWATH-MS datasets acquired from research or clinical specimens. This resource supports the confident detection and quantification of 50.9% of all human proteins annotated by UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot and is therefore expected to find wide application in basic and clinical research. Data are available via ProteomeXchange (PXD000953-954) and SWATHAtlas (SAL00016-35).


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