The ProteomeXchange consortium in 2017: supporting the cultural change in proteomics public data deposition

Eric W. Deutsch(Institute for Systems Biology), Attila Csordás(European Bioinformatics Institute), Zhi Sun(Institute for Systems Biology), Andrew F. Jarnuczak(European Bioinformatics Institute), Yasset Pérez‐Riverol(European Bioinformatics Institute), Tobias Ternent(European Bioinformatics Institute), David Campbell(Institute for Systems Biology), Manuel Bernal Llinares(European Bioinformatics Institute), Shujiro Okuda(Niigata University), Shin Kawano(Research Organization of Information and Systems), Robert L. Moritz(Institute for Systems Biology), Jeremy Carver(University of California San Diego), Mingxun Wang(University of California San Diego), Yasushi Ishihama(Kyoto University), Nuno Bandeira(University of California San Diego), Henning Hermjakob(European Bioinformatics Institute), Juan Antonio Vizcaíno(European Bioinformatics Institute)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 11, 2016
Cited by 945Open Access
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Abstract

The ProteomeXchange (PX) Consortium of proteomics resources (http://www.proteomexchange.org) was formally started in 2011 to standardize data submission and dissemination of mass spectrometry proteomics data worldwide. We give an overview of the current consortium activities and describe the advances of the past few years. Augmenting the PX founding members (PRIDE and PeptideAtlas, including the PASSEL resource), two new members have joined the consortium: MassIVE and jPOST. ProteomeCentral remains as the common data access portal, providing the ability to search for data sets in all participating PX resources, now with enhanced data visualization components.We describe the updated submission guidelines, now expanded to include four members instead of two. As demonstrated by data submission statistics, PX is supporting a change in culture of the proteomics field: public data sharing is now an accepted standard, supported by requirements for journal submissions resulting in public data release becoming the norm. More than 4500 data sets have been submitted to the various PX resources since 2012. Human is the most represented species with approximately half of the data sets, followed by some of the main model organisms and a growing list of more than 900 diverse species. Data reprocessing activities are becoming more prominent, with both MassIVE and PeptideAtlas releasing the results of reprocessed data sets. Finally, we outline the upcoming advances for ProteomeXchange.


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