Blood Protein - Methods summarySummaryThe Blood Proteins section contains information regarding the proteins present in blood. Externally and “In-house” generated data are integrated to explore human plasma protein profiles in healthy individuals. Plasma levels in blood are presented, based both on antibody-based immune assays and mass spectrometry-based proteomics. Key publicationsUhlén M et al. (2019) “The human secretome” Sci signal What can you learn from the Blood Protein section?Learn about
Data overview
How has the data been generated?The plasma proteome levels from healthy individuals were measured using proximity extension assay (PEA). The healthy individuals were followed longitudinal for two years and the plasma proteome levels were measured every three months. Data generated by proximity extension assays was normalized within and between plates followed by transformation using a predetermined correction factor and provided in the arbitrary unit Normalized Protein eXpression (NPX). The Blood Atlas also contain information of proteins detected by mass spectrometry-based proteomics, based on publicly available data on the Peptide Atlas. The mass-spectrometry based data was filtered to include only the minimal, non-redundant list of proteins derived from the set of identified peptides and exclude entries labelled as contaminants. In addition, the concentration of actively secreted proteins was annotated using publicly available literature.
What is presented in the section?In the gene summary page of the Blood Proteins section, the protein levels from the PEA based assays are shown. The longitudinal variation in the expression of a protein in plasma from healthy individuals is displayed in two line plots separated according to gender.
In addition, the gene summary page include the blood concentrations from mass spectrometry studies when available in the Peptide Atlas. The predicted concentration in blood (plasma or serum) is shown.
Furthermore, the blood concentration for the proteins annotated to be secreted to blood is shown (when available). The reported concentration in blood are shown for some representative studies with reference to the literature.
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