For targeted proteomics to be broadly adopted in biological laboratories as a routine experimental protocol, wet-bench biologists must be able to approach SRM assay design in the same way they approach biological experimental design. Most often, biological hypotheses are envisioned in a set of protein interactions, networks and pathways. We present a plugin for the popular Skyline tool that presents public mass spectrometry data in a pathway-centric view to assist users in browsing available data and determining how to design quantitative experiments. Selected proteins and their underlying mass spectra are imported to Skyline for further assay design (transition selection). The same plugin can be used for hypothesis-drive DIA data analysis, again utilizing the pathway view to help narrow down the set of proteins which will be investigated. The plugin is backed by the PNNL Biodiversity Library, a corpus of 3 million peptides from >100 organisms, and the draft human proteome. Users can upload personal data to the plugin to use the pathway navigation prior to importing their own data into Skyline.
Revised: April 4, 2017 |
Published: November 1, 2016
Citation
Degan M.G., L. Ryadinskiy, G.M. Fujimoto, C.S. Wilkins, C.F. Lichti, and S.H. Payne. 2016.A Skyline Plugin for Pathway-Centric Data Browsing.Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 27, no. 11:1752-1757.PNNL-SA-117929.doi:10.1007/s13361-016-1448-3