A repository of assays to quantify 10,000 human proteins by SWATH-MS.

Journal: Scientific Data
Published:
Abstract

Mass spectrometry is the method of choice for deep and reliable exploration of the (human) proteome. Targeted mass spectrometry reliably detects and quantifies pre-determined sets of proteins in a complex biological matrix and is used in studies that rely on the quantitatively accurate and reproducible measurement of proteins across multiple samples. It requires the one-time, a priori generation of a specific measurement assay for each targeted protein. SWATH-MS is a mass spectrometric method that combines data-independent acquisition (DIA) and targeted data analysis and vastly extends the throughput of proteins that can be targeted in a sample compared to selected reaction monitoring (SRM). Here we present a compendium of highly specific assays covering more than 10,000 human proteins and enabling their targeted analysis in SWATH-MS datasets acquired from research or clinical specimens. This resource supports the confident detection and quantification of 50.9% of all human proteins annotated by UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot and is therefore expected to find wide application in basic and clinical research. Data are available via ProteomeXchange (PXD000953-954) and SWATHAtlas (SAL00016-35).

Authors
George Rosenberger, Ching Koh, Tiannan Guo, Hannes Röst, Petri Kouvonen, Ben Collins, Moritz Heusel, Yansheng Liu, Etienne Caron, Anton Vichalkovski, Marco Faini, Olga Schubert, Pouya Faridi, H Ebhardt, Mariette Matondo, Henry Lam, Samuel Bader, David Campbell, Eric Deutsch, Robert Moritz, Stephen Tate, Ruedi Aebersold