| Literature DB >> 19087293 |
Fan Mo1, Xu Hong, Feng Gao, Lin Du, Jun Wang, Gilbert S Omenn, Biaoyang Lin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alternative splicing is an important gene regulation mechanism. It is estimated that about 74% of multi-exon human genes have alternative splicing. High throughput tandem (MS/MS) mass spectrometry provides valuable information for rapidly identifying potentially novel alternatively-spliced protein products from experimental datasets. However, the ability to identify alternative splicing events through tandem mass spectrometry depends on the database against which the spectra are searched.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19087293 PMCID: PMC2636810 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-9-537
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Top panel, the mass spectrum for the peptide LDEEVKIQR; bottom panel, the mass spectrum for the peptide KAFGENYLFPDGR. Matched b-ions (e.g. b2+, b6+) are indicated by red, and matched y-ions (e.g. y7+) are indicated by blue. The + indicates that an ion is a singly-charged ion.
Figure 2Illustration of splicing of exons 3 and 7 of the proto-oncogene c-CBL that generates the peptide KAFGENYLFPDGR we identified by MS/MS. Translated amino acid residues (one letter code) were aligned with the combined exon 3 and 7 DNA sequences. The double forward-slash indicates the exon/exon junction. The underlined amino acid residues indicate the peptide corresponding to the mass spectrum we identified.
Figure 3Flowchart of our pipeline for identifying exon skipping forms using MS/MS data.