1. MitoCarta3.0: an updated mitochondrial proteome now with sub-organelle localization and pathway annotations.
- Author
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Rath S, Sharma R, Gupta R, Ast T, Chan C, Durham TJ, Goodman RP, Grabarek Z, Haas ME, Hung WHW, Joshi PR, Jourdain AA, Kim SH, Kotrys AV, Lam SS, McCoy JG, Meisel JD, Miranda M, Panda A, Patgiri A, Rogers R, Sadre S, Shah H, Skinner OS, To TL, Walker MA, Wang H, Ward PS, Wengrod J, Yuan CC, Calvo SE, and Mootha VK
- Subjects
- Animals, Bayes Theorem, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial metabolism, Datasets as Topic, Humans, Internet, Machine Learning, Mass Spectrometry, Mice, Mitochondria genetics, Mitochondrial Membranes metabolism, Mitochondrial Proteins classification, Mitochondrial Proteins genetics, Proteome classification, Proteome genetics, Software, Databases, Protein, Mitochondria metabolism, Mitochondrial Proteins metabolism, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Proteome metabolism
- Abstract
The mammalian mitochondrial proteome is under dual genomic control, with 99% of proteins encoded by the nuclear genome and 13 originating from the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). We previously developed MitoCarta, a catalogue of over 1000 genes encoding the mammalian mitochondrial proteome. This catalogue was compiled using a Bayesian integration of multiple sequence features and experimental datasets, notably protein mass spectrometry of mitochondria isolated from fourteen murine tissues. Here, we introduce MitoCarta3.0. Beginning with the MitoCarta2.0 inventory, we performed manual review to remove 100 genes and introduce 78 additional genes, arriving at an updated inventory of 1136 human genes. We now include manually curated annotations of sub-mitochondrial localization (matrix, inner membrane, intermembrane space, outer membrane) as well as assignment to 149 hierarchical 'MitoPathways' spanning seven broad functional categories relevant to mitochondria. MitoCarta3.0, including sub-mitochondrial localization and MitoPathway annotations, is freely available at http://www.broadinstitute.org/mitocarta and should serve as a continued community resource for mitochondrial biology and medicine., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2021
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