Integration of
Proteomics and Transcriptomics Data
Sets for the Analysis of a Lymphoma B‑Cell Line in the Context
of the Chromosome-Centric Human Proteome Project
posted on 2015-09-04, 00:00authored byPaula Díez, Conrad Droste, Rosa M. Dégano, María González-Muñoz, Nieves Ibarrola, Martín Pérez-Andrés, Alba Garin-Muga, Víctor Segura, Gyorgy Marko-Varga, Joshua LaBaer, Alberto Orfao, Fernando J. Corrales, Javier De Las Rivas, Manuel Fuentes
A comprehensive study of the molecular
active landscape of human
cells can be undertaken to integrate two different but complementary
perspectives: transcriptomics, and proteomics. After the genome era,
proteomics has emerged as a powerful tool to simultaneously identify
and characterize the compendium of thousands of different proteins
active in a cell. Thus, the Chromosome-centric Human Proteome Project
(C-HPP) is promoting a full characterization of the human proteome
combining high-throughput proteomics with the data derived from genome-wide
expression profiling of protein-coding genes. Here we present a full
proteomic profiling of a human lymphoma B-cell line (Ramos) performed using a nanoUPLC-LTQ-Orbitrap Velos proteomic platform,
combined to an in-depth transcriptomic profiling of the same cell
type. Data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD001933.
Integration of the proteomic and transcriptomic data sets revealed
a 94% overlap in the proteins identified by both -omics approaches.
Moreover, functional enrichment analysis of the proteomic profiles
showed an enrichment of several functions directly related to the
biological and morphological characteristics of B-cells. In turn,
about 30% of all protein-coding genes present in the whole human genome
were identified as being expressed by the Ramos cells
(stable average of 30% genes along all the chromosomes), revealing
the size of the protein expression-set present in one specific human
cell type. Additionally, the identification of missing proteins in
our data sets has been reported, highlighting the power of the approach.
Also, a comparison between neXtProt and UniProt database searches
has been performed. In summary, our transcriptomic and proteomic experimental
profiling provided a high coverage report of the expressed proteome
from a human lymphoma B-cell type with a clear insight into the biological
processes that characterized these cells. In this way, we demonstrated
the usefulness of combining -omics for a comprehensive characterization
of specific biological systems.