Cell Atlas release


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Emma Lundberg launching the Cell Atlas
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The team and our booth

Yesterday our new Cell Atlas was released, at the American Society of Cell Biology Meeting. The Cell Atlas is an open-access interactive database with unparalleled high-resolution images. It visualizes for the first time the location of over 12,000 proteins in cells – opening the way to spatial proteomics, an exciting new discipline predicted to lead to a fundamental increase in our understanding of human health and disease.

Prof Mathias Uhlen, Director of the Human Protein Atlas explains:

– After the genome projects that has characterized the number of human protein-coding genes, the next step is to elucidate the function of these proteins. Being able to show the location of the human proteins in time and space with a subcellular resolution is an essential first step towards novel insights into protein function.

With more than 12,000 human proteins mapped to 30 different cellular structures, the Cell Atlas provides spatial information on protein expression patterns on a fine subcellular level. The analysis reveals a surprisingly complex cellular architecture with over half of all proteins localized to multiple compartments and a significant portion exhibits variation in expression at a single cell level.

Dr. Emma Lundberg is Director of the Cell Atlas:

–In particular, we expect the Cell Atlas to play a key role in the exciting new area of spatial proteomics. In order to expand our understanding of the workings of human cells from a holistic point of view, in particular in the context of health and disease, detailed knowledge about the underlying molecular system is needed.

The whole team is present in San Francisco, and the Cell Atlas was released at a well-attended Tech Talk yesterday. The whole day, many interested people came to our booth in the exhibition hall, wanting to learn more about the Atlas, and already on Saturday we held a much appreciated workshop on how to use the Human Protein Atlas. In addition, several members have posters and/or oral presentations presenting different parts of the Cell Atlas,

Explore the human cell!


Frida Henningson Johnson