- Proteome
The proteome is the entire complement of
protein s expressed by a genome, cell, tissue or organism. More specifically, it is the set expressed proteins at a given time under defined conditions. The term is aportmanteau of "proteins " and "genome ".The term has been applied to several different types of biological systems. A cellular proteome is the collection of proteins found in a particular cell type under a particular set of environmental conditions such as exposure to hormone stimulation. It can also be useful to consider an organism's complete proteome, which can be conceptualized as the complete set of proteins from all of the various cellular proteomes. This is very roughly the protein equivalent of the
genome . The term "proteome" has also been used to refer to the collection of proteins in certain sub-cellular biological systems. For example, all of the proteins in a virus can be called a viral proteome.The proteome is larger than the
genome , especially in eukaryotes, in the sense that there are more proteins than genes. This is due toalternative splicing of genes and post-translational modifications likeglycosylation orphosphorylation .Moreover the proteome has at least two levels of complexity lacking in the genome. When the genome is defined by the sequence of nucleotides, the proteome cannot be limited to the sum of the sequences of the proteins present. Knowledge of the proteome requires knowledge of (1) the structure of the proteins in the proteome and (2) the functional interaction between the proteins.
Proteomics , the study of the proteome, has largely been practiced through the separation of proteins by two dimensionalgel electrophoresis . In the first dimension, the proteins are separated byisoelectric focusing , which resolves proteins on the basis of charge. In the second dimension, proteins are separated by molecular weight usingSDS-PAGE . The gel is dyed with Coomassie Blue orsilver to visualize the proteins. Spots on the gel are proteins that have migrated to specific locations.The mass spectrometer has augmented proteomics.
Peptide mass fingerprinting identifies a protein by cleaving it into short peptides and then deduces the protein's identity by matching the observed peptide masses against asequence database . Tandem mass spectrometry, on the other hand, can get sequence information from individual peptides by isolating them, colliding them with a non-reactive gas, and then cataloguing the fragment ions produced.History
The term was coined by
Marc Wilkins in1994 in the symposium: "2D Electrophoresis: from protein maps to genomes" in Siena, Italy, and was subsequently published in1995 [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=7498152 (1)] , which was part of his PhD thesis. Wilkins used it to describe the entire complement ofprotein s expressed by a genome, cell, tissue or organism.See also
*
Proteomics
*Metabolome
*Cytome
*Bioinformatics
*List of omics topics in biology
*Transcriptome External links
* [http://www.proteome.org The Proteome Society]
* [http://bioinformatics.oupjournals.org/ Bioinformatics Journal]
* [http://www.grid.org/projects/hpf/about.htm Grid Computing of the Human Proteome]
* Databases: PIR | Swissprot | Pfam
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