4.8 Article

dbSAP: single amino-acid polymorphism database for protein variation detection

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 45, Issue D1, Pages D827-D832

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkw1096

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National High Technology Research and Development Program of China [2015AA020108]
  2. China Human Proteome Project [2014DFB30030, 2014DFB30010]
  3. National Science Foundation of China [31171264, 31401133]
  4. 111 Project [B14019]
  5. Supercomputer Center of East China Normal University
  6. Graduate School

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Millions of human single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) or mutations have been identified so far, and these variants could be strongly correlated with phenotypic variations of traits/diseases. Among these variants, non-synonymous ones can result in aminoacid changes that are called single amino-acid polymorphisms (SAPs). Although some studies have tried to investigate the SAPs, only a small fraction of SAPs have been identified due to inadequately inferred protein variation database and the low coverage of mass spectrometry (MS) experiments. Here, we present the dbSAP database for conveniently accessing the comprehensive information and relationships of spectra, peptides and proteins of SAPs, as well as related genes, pathways, diseases and drug targets. In order to fully explore human SAPs, we built a customized protein database that contained comprehensive variant proteins by integrating and annotating the human SNPs and mutations from eight distinct databases (UniProt, Protein Mutation Database, HPMD, MSIPI, MS-CanProVar, dbSNP, Ensembl and COSMIC). After a series of quality controls, a total of 16 854 SAP peptides involving in 439 537 spectra were identified with large scale MS datasets from various human tissues and cell lines.

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