Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

The Human Protein Atlas

General information

URL: http://www.proteinatlas.org
Full name:
Description: The Human Protein Atlas project creats a map of protein expression patterns in normal cells, tissues and cancer. In this database, 11,200 unique proteins corresponding to over 50% of all human protein-encoding genes have been analysed.
Year founded: 2011
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: Sweden

Classification & Tag

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Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: Uppsala University
Address: Department of Genetics and Pathology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
City: Uppsala
Province/State:
Country/Region: Sweden
Contact name (PI/Team): Pontén F
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): Fredrik.ponten@igp.uu.se

Publications

21752111
The Human Protein Atlas as a proteomic resource for biomarker discovery. [PMID: 21752111]
Pontén F, Schwenk JM, Asplund A, Edqvist PH.

The analysis of tissue-specific expression at both the gene and protein levels is vital for understanding human biology and disease. Antibody-based proteomics provides a strategy for the systematic generation of antibodies against all human proteins to combine with protein profiling in tissues and cells using tissue microarrays, immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence. The Human Protein Atlas project was launched in 2003 with the aim of creating a map of protein expression patterns in normal cells, tissues and cancer. At present, 11,200 unique proteins corresponding to over 50% of all human protein-encoding genes have been analysed. All protein expression data, including underlying high-resolution images, are published on the free and publically available Human Protein Atlas portal (http://www.proteinatlas.org). This database provides an important source of information for numerous biomedical research projects, including biomarker discovery efforts. Moreover, the global analysis of how our genome is expressed at the protein level has provided basic knowledge on the ubiquitous expression of a large proportion of our proteins and revealed the paucity of cell- and tissue-type-specific proteins.

J Intern Med. 2011:270(5) | 217 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)

Ranking

All databases:
1006/6895 (85.424%)
Expression:
189/1347 (86.043%)
1006
Total Rank
207
Citations
14.786
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-28
Curated by:
Meiye Jiang [2018-02-26]