Spiked proteomic standard dataset for testing label-free quantitative software and statistical methods.

Fiche publication


Date publication

mars 2016

Journal

Data in brief

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr CIANFERANI Sarah, Mme SCHAEFFER-REISS Christine, Dr VAN DORSSELAER Alain, Dr CARAPITO Christine


Tous les auteurs :
Ramus C, Hovasse A, Marcellin M, Hesse AM, Mouton-Barbosa E, Bouyssié D, Vaca S, Carapito C, Chaoui K, Bruley C, Garin J, Cianférani S, Ferro M, Dorssaeler AV, Burlet-Schiltz O, Schaeffer C, Couté Y, Gonzalez de Peredo A

Résumé

This data article describes a controlled, spiked proteomic dataset for which the "ground truth" of variant proteins is known. It is based on the LC-MS analysis of samples composed of a fixed background of yeast lysate and different spiked amounts of the UPS1 mixture of 48 recombinant proteins. It can be used to objectively evaluate bioinformatic pipelines for label-free quantitative analysis, and their ability to detect variant proteins with good sensitivity and low false discovery rate in large-scale proteomic studies. More specifically, it can be useful for tuning software tools parameters, but also testing new algorithms for label-free quantitative analysis, or for evaluation of downstream statistical methods. The raw MS files can be downloaded from ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD001819. Starting from some raw files of this dataset, we also provide here some processed data obtained through various bioinformatics tools (including MaxQuant, Skyline, MFPaQ, IRMa-hEIDI and Scaffold) in different workflows, to exemplify the use of such data in the context of software benchmarking, as discussed in details in the accompanying manuscript [1]. The experimental design used here for data processing takes advantage of the different spike levels introduced in the samples composing the dataset, and processed data are merged in a single file to facilitate the evaluation and illustration of software tools results for the detection of variant proteins with different absolute expression levels and fold change values.

Référence

Data Brief. 2016 Mar;6:286-94