4.5 Article

The Pig PeptideAtlas: A resource for systems biology in animal production and biomedicine

Journal

PROTEOMICS
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages 634-644

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500195

Keywords

Animal model; Biomarker; Pig PeptideAtlas; Proteomics; Repositories

Funding

  1. Danish Meat Association
  2. Danish Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries
  3. Danish Council for Independent Research [11-106956]
  4. Aarhus University
  5. Obelske family foundation
  6. SparNord foundation
  7. Svend Andersen foundation
  8. National Institutes of Health NHGRI [RC2HG005805]
  9. NIGMS [R01GM087221, S10RR027584, 2P50GM076547]
  10. NIBIB [U54EB020406]
  11. National Science Foundation MRI grant [0923536]
  12. Direct For Biological Sciences
  13. Div Of Biological Infrastructure [923536] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Biological research of Sus scrofa, the domestic pig, is of immediate relevance for food production sciences, and for developing pig as a model organism for human biomedical research. Publicly available data repositories play a fundamental role for all biological sciences, and protein data repositories are in particular essential for the successful development of new proteomic methods. Cumulative proteome data repositories, including the PeptideAtlas, provide the means for targeted proteomics, system-wide observations, and cross-species observational studies, but pigs have so far been underrepresented in existing repositories. We here present a significantly improved build of the Pig PeptideAtlas, which includes pig proteome data from 25 tissues and three body fluid types mapped to 7139 canonical proteins. The content of the Pig PeptideAtlas reflects actively ongoing research within the veterinary proteomics domain, and this article demonstrates how the expression of isoform-unique peptides can be observed across distinct tissues and body fluids. The Pig PeptideAtlas is a unique resource for use in animal proteome research, particularly biomarker discovery and for preliminary design of SRM assays, which are equally important for progress in research that supports farm animal production and veterinary health, as for developing pig models with relevance to human health research.

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