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Initial quantitative proteomic map of 28 mouse tissues using the SILAC mouse
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2013 (English)In: Molecular & Cellular Proteomics, ISSN 1535-9476, E-ISSN 1535-9484, Vol. 12, no 6, p. 1709-1722Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Identifying the building blocks of mammalian tissues is a precondition for understanding their function. In particular, global and quantitative analysis of the proteome of mammalian tissues would point to tissue-specific mechanisms and place the function of each protein in a whole-organism perspective. We performed proteomic analyses of 28 mouse tissues using high-resolution mass spectrometry and used a mix of mouse tissues labeled via stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture as a "spike-in" internal standard for accurate protein quantification across these tissues. We identified a total of 7,349 proteins and quantified 6,974 of them. Bioinformatic data analysis showed that physiologically related tissues clustered together and that highly expressed proteins represented the characteristic tissue functions. Tissue specialization was reflected prominently in the proteomic profiles and is apparent already in their hundred most abundant proteins. The proportion of strictly tissue-specific proteins appeared to be small. However, even proteins with household functions, such as those in ribosomes and spliceosomes, can have dramatic expression differences among tissues. We describe a computational framework with which to correlate proteome profiles with physiological functions of the tissue. Our data will be useful to the broad scientific community as an initial atlas of protein expression of a mammalian species.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2013. Vol. 12, no 6, p. 1709-1722
Keywords [en]
amino acid, proteome, ribosome protein, stable isotope, animal tissue, article, bioinformatics, cell culture, cerebellum, embryo, isotope labeling, liquid chromatography, mouse, nonhuman, priority journal, protein analysis, protein expression, protein function, proteomics, quantitative analysis, spliceosome, tandem mass spectrometry, tissue distribution
National Category
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-134267DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M112.024919ISI: 000319865000018PubMedID: 23436904Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-84878741907OAI: oai:DiVA.org:kth-134267DiVA, id: diva2:666244
Funder
EU, FP7, Seventh Framework Programme, HEALTH-F4-2008-021,648Science for Life Laboratory - a national resource center for high-throughput molecular bioscience
Note

QC 20131122

Available from: 2013-11-22 Created: 2013-11-20 Last updated: 2022-06-23Bibliographically approved

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Uhlén, Mathias

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Proteomics and NanobiotechnologyScience for Life Laboratory, SciLifeLab
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