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Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

DegraBase

General information

URL: http://wellslab.ucsf.edu/degrabase
Full name: a database of proteolysis in healthy and apoptotic human cells
Description: Here we present a database, called the DegraBase, which compiles 8090 unique N termini from 3206 proteins directly identified in subtiligase-based positive enrichment mass spectrometry experiments in healthy and apoptotic human cell lines.
Year founded: 2013
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: United States

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Contact information

University/Institution: University of California San Francisco
Address:
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Province/State:
Country/Region: United States
Contact name (PI/Team): James A. Wells
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): jim.wells@ucsf.edu

Publications

23264352
The DegraBase: a database of proteolysis in healthy and apoptotic human cells. [PMID: 23264352]
Crawford ED, Seaman JE, Agard N, Hsu GW, Julien O, Mahrus S, Nguyen H, Shimbo K, Yoshihara HA, Zhuang M, Chalkley RJ, Wells JA.

Proteolysis is a critical post-translational modification for regulation of cellular processes. Our lab has previously developed a technique for specifically labeling unmodified protein N termini, the ?-aminome, using the engineered enzyme, subtiligase. Here we present a database, called the DegraBase (http://wellslab.ucsf.edu/degrabase/), which compiles 8090 unique N termini from 3206 proteins directly identified in subtiligase-based positive enrichment mass spectrometry experiments in healthy and apoptotic human cell lines. We include both previously published and unpublished data in our analysis, resulting in a total of 2144 unique ?-amines identified in healthy cells, and 6990 in cells undergoing apoptosis. The N termini derive from three general categories of proteolysis with respect to cleavage location and functional role: translational N-terminal methionine processing (?10% of total proteolysis), sites close to the translational N terminus that likely represent removal of transit or signal peptides (?25% of total), and finally, other endoproteolytic cuts (?65% of total). Induction of apoptosis causes relatively little change in the first two proteolytic categories, but dramatic changes are seen in endoproteolysis. For example, we observed 1706 putative apoptotic caspase cuts, more than double the total annotated sites in the CASBAH and MEROPS databases. In the endoproteolysis category, there are a total of nearly 3000 noncaspase nontryptic cleavages that are not currently reported in the MEROPS database. These studies significantly increase the annotation for all categories of proteolysis in human cells and allow public access for investigators to explore interesting proteolytic events in healthy and apoptotic human cells.

Mol Cell Proteomics. 2013:12(3) | 115 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2026-05-30)

Ranking

All databases:
1508/6932 (78.26%)
Expression:
299/1363 (78.136%)
Structure:
201/972 (79.424%)
1508
Total Rank
107
Citations
8.231
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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-28
Curated by:
Nashaiman Pervaiz [2018-12-28]
Zhuang Xiong [2018-02-25]
Pei Wang [2018-01-28]