posted on 2015-09-04, 00:00authored byGilbert S. Omenn, Lydie Lane, Emma K. Lundberg, Ronald
C. Beavis, Alexey I. Nesvizhskii, Eric W. Deutsch
Remarkable
progress continues on the annotation of the proteins
identified in the Human Proteome and on finding credible proteomic
evidence for the expression of “missing proteins”. Missing
proteins are those with no previous protein-level evidence or insufficient
evidence to make a confident identification upon reanalysis in PeptideAtlas
and curation in neXtProt. Enhanced with several major new data sets
published in 2014, the human proteome presented as neXtProt, version
2014-09-19, has 16 491 unique confident proteins (PE level
1), up from 13 664 at 2012-12 and 15 646 at 2013-09.
That leaves 2948 missing proteins from genes classified having protein
existence level PE 2, 3, or 4, as well as 616 dubious proteins at
PE 5. Here, we document the progress of the HPP and discuss the importance
of assessing the quality of evidence, confirming automated findings
and considering alternative protein matches for spectra and peptides.
We provide guidelines for proteomics investigators to apply in reporting
newly identified proteins.