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Progress and Challenges in Ocean Metaproteomics and Proposed Best Practices for Data Sharing

Authors :
Adam Shepherd
Robert M. Morris
Jaclyn K. Saunders
Benjamin A. Neely
Erin M. Bertrand
Michael G. Janech
David A. Walsh
Danie Kinkade
Megan Duffy
William Judson Hervey
David A. Gaylord
Mak A. Saito
Eli K. Moore
Noelle A. Held
Brook L. Nunn
Dagmar H. Leary
Pratik D. Jagtap
Nicholas Symmonds
Matthew R. McIlvin
Robert L. Hettich
Source :
J Proteome Res
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2019.

Abstract

Ocean metaproteomics is an emerging field enabling discoveries about marine microbial communities and their impact on global biogeochemical processes. Recent ocean metaproteomic studies have provided insight into microbial nutrient transport, colimitation of carbon fixation, the metabolism of microbial biofilms, and dynamics of carbon flux in marine ecosystems. Future methodological developments could provide new capabilities such as characterizing long-term ecosystem changes, biogeochemical reaction rates, and in situ stoichiometries. Yet challenges remain for ocean metaproteomics due to the great biological diversity that produces highly complex mass spectra, as well as the difficulty in obtaining and working with environmental samples. This review summarizes the progress and challenges facing ocean metaproteomic scientists and proposes best practices for data sharing of ocean metaproteomic data sets, including the data types and metadata needed to enable intercomparisons of protein distributions and annotations that could foster global ocean metaproteomic capabilities.

Details

ISSN :
15353907 and 15353893
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Proteome Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d652e836173bf242ceb976cf4760ed8a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jproteome.8b00761