Identification of Protein Isoforms Using Reference Databases Built from Long and Short Read RNA-Sequencing.
Aidan P TayJoshua J HameyGabriella E MartynLaurence O W WilsonMarc R WilkinsPublished in: Journal of proteome research (2022)
Alternative splicing can lead to distinct protein isoforms. These can have different functions in specific cells and tissues or in different developmental stages. In this study, we explored whether transcripts assembled from long read, nanopore-based, direct RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) could improve the identification of protein isoforms in human K562 cells. By comparing with Illumina-based short read RNA-seq, we showed that a large proportion of Ensembl transcripts (5949/14,326) and genes expressing alternatively spliced transcripts (486/2981) identified with long direct reads were missed by short paired-end reads. By co-analyzing proteomic and transcriptomic data, we also showed that some peptides (826/35,976), proteins (262/3215), and protein isoforms arising from distinct transcript variants (574/1212) identified with isoform-specific peptides via custom long-read-based databases were missed in Illumina-derived databases. Finally, we generated unequivocal peptide evidence for a set of protein isoforms and showed that long read, direct RNA-seq allows the discovery of novel protein isoforms not already in reference databases or custom databases built from short read RNA-seq data. Our analysis highlights the benefits of long read RNA-seq data in the generation of reference databases to increase tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) identification of protein isoforms.
Keyphrases
- rna seq
- single cell
- single molecule
- big data
- protein protein
- amino acid
- high throughput
- ms ms
- induced apoptosis
- binding protein
- small molecule
- gene expression
- endothelial cells
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- artificial intelligence
- electronic health record
- signaling pathway
- deep learning
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- solid state
- label free