Trans-Proteomic Pipeline, a standardized data processing pipeline for large-scale reproducible proteomics informatics

Democratization of genomics technologies has enabled the rapid determination of genotypes. More recently the democratization of comprehensive proteomics technologies is enabling the determination of the cellular phenotype and the molecular events that define its dynamic state. Core proteomic technol...

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Published inProteomics. Clinical applications Vol. 9; no. 7-8; pp. 745 - 754
Main Authors Deutsch, Eric W., Mendoza, Luis, Shteynberg, David, Slagel, Joseph, Sun, Zhi, Moritz, Robert L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Germany Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.08.2015
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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Summary:Democratization of genomics technologies has enabled the rapid determination of genotypes. More recently the democratization of comprehensive proteomics technologies is enabling the determination of the cellular phenotype and the molecular events that define its dynamic state. Core proteomic technologies include MS to define protein sequence, protein:protein interactions, and protein PTMs. Key enabling technologies for proteomics are bioinformatic pipelines to identify, quantitate, and summarize these events. The Trans‐Proteomics Pipeline (TPP) is a robust open‐source standardized data processing pipeline for large‐scale reproducible quantitative MS proteomics. It supports all major operating systems and instrument vendors via open data formats. Here, we provide a review of the overall proteomics workflow supported by the TPP, its major tools, and how it can be used in its various modes from desktop to cloud computing. We describe new features for the TPP, including data visualization functionality. We conclude by describing some common perils that affect the analysis of MS/MS datasets, as well as some major upcoming features.
Bibliography:National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering - No. U54EB020406
istex:EB20B983CD858F97707C606A79F23C206E63C082
ark:/67375/WNG-WD0JRLJ3-0
National Institutes of Health from the NHGRI - No. RC2 HG005805
National Science Foundation MRI - No. 0923536
NIGMS - No. R01 GM087221 and 2P50 GM076547
ProteomeXchange" - No. 260558
ArticleID:PRCA1636
See the article online to view Figs. 1–3 in colour.
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ISSN:1862-8346
1862-8354
1862-8354
DOI:10.1002/prca.201400164