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The human secretome

Authors :
Linnéa Strandberg
Jan Mulder
Linn Fagerberg
Wen Zhong
Evelina Sjöstedt
Andreas Hober
Bjørn G. Voldborg
Abdellah Tebani
Peter Thul
Björn Forsström
Devin P. Sullivan
Göran Bergström
David Kotol
Fredrik Pontén
Sara Kanje
Anders Gummesson
Borbala Katona
Sophia Hober
Åsa Sivertsson
Jochen M. Schwenk
Anna Berling
Emil Lindström
Jimmy Vuu
Anne-Sophie Svensson
Jens Nielsen
Burcu Ayoglu
Emma Lundberg
Magdalena Malm
Cecilia Lindskog
Per Oksvold
Tea Dodig-Crnković
Charlotte Stadler
Ragna S. Häussler
Julia Scheffel
Melanie Dannemeyer
Hanna Tegel
Anna-Luisa Volk
Max J. Karlsson
Adil Mardinoglu
Martin Zwahlen
Magnus Lundqvist
Siri Ekblad
Peter Nilsson
Mathias Uhlén
Kalle von Feilitzen
Frida Danielsson
Anna Månberg
Jonathan L. Robinson
Diana Mahdessian
Elisa Pin
Fredrik Edfors
Johan Rockberg
Mun-Gwan Hong
Source :
Science signaling. 12(609)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The proteins secreted by human cells (collectively referred to as the secretome) are important not only for the basic understanding of human biology but also for the identification of potential targets for future diagnostics and therapies. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of proteins predicted to be secreted in human cells, which provides information about their final localization in the human body, including the proteins actively secreted to peripheral blood. The analysis suggests that a large number of the proteins of the secretome are not secreted out of the cell, but instead are retained intracellularly, whereas another large group of proteins were identified that are predicted to be retained locally at the tissue of expression and not secreted into the blood. Proteins detected in the human blood by mass spectrometry-based proteomics and antibody-based immunoassays are also presented with estimates of their concentrations in the blood. The results are presented in an updated version 19 of the Human Protein Atlas in which each gene encoding a secretome protein is annotated to provide an open-access knowledge resource of the human secretome, including body-wide expression data, spatial localization data down to the single-cell and subcellular levels, and data about the presence of proteins that are detectable in the blood.

Details

ISSN :
19379145
Volume :
12
Issue :
609
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science signaling
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a1f229d2aa95b4d40ca2b172cd8066af