Blood Plasma Reference Material – A Global Resource for Proteomic Research
(2013) In Journal of Proteome Research 12(7). p.3087-3092- Abstract
- There is an ever-increasing awareness and interest within the clinical research field that has creating a large demand for blood fraction samples as well as other clinical samples. The translational research area is another field that demanding for blood samples, used widely in proteomics, genomics, as well as metabolomics. Blood samples are the global most common biological samples that find its use in a broad variety of applications in Life Science. We hereby introduce a new reference blood plasma (EDTA) that is aimed as a global resource for the Proteomics community. We have developed these reference plasma standards by defining the Control group as those with CRP levels <3mg/L and a Disease group with CRP ranges >30 mg/L. In... (More)
- There is an ever-increasing awareness and interest within the clinical research field that has creating a large demand for blood fraction samples as well as other clinical samples. The translational research area is another field that demanding for blood samples, used widely in proteomics, genomics, as well as metabolomics. Blood samples are the global most common biological samples that find its use in a broad variety of applications in Life Science. We hereby introduce a new reference blood plasma (EDTA) that is aimed as a global resource for the Proteomics community. We have developed these reference plasma standards by defining the Control group as those with CRP levels <3mg/L and a Disease group with CRP ranges >30 mg/L. In these references we have used both newborn children 1-2 weeks, as well as youngsters 10-15 years, and middle aged 30-50 years, and elderly patients at the ages of 65+. The total number of these reference plasma pools was 80 patients in each group. We provide data on the developments and characteristics of the reference blood plasma standards, as well as what is used by the team members at the respective laboratories. The standards have been evaluated by pilot sample processing in biobanking operations, and are currently a resource that allows the Proteomic society to perform quantitative proteomic studies. By the use of high quality reference plasma samples, global initiatives, such as the Chromosome Human Proteome Project (C-HPP), will benefit as one scientific program when the entire human proteome is mapped and linked to human diseases. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/3459912
- author
- Malm, Johan LU ; Danmyr, Pia LU ; Nilsson, Rolf ; Appelqvist, Roger LU ; Végvári, Ákos LU and Marko-Varga, György LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2013
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- C-HPP, blood plasma reference material
- in
- Journal of Proteome Research
- volume
- 12
- issue
- 7
- pages
- 3087 - 3092
- publisher
- The American Chemical Society (ACS)
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000321605700002
- scopus:84879910249
- pmid:23701512
- ISSN
- 1535-3893
- DOI
- 10.1021/pr400131r
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 1b1d5d9b-7fad-498f-9452-10df61208153 (old id 3459912)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 09:48:47
- date last changed
- 2022-03-19 06:34:48
@article{1b1d5d9b-7fad-498f-9452-10df61208153, abstract = {{There is an ever-increasing awareness and interest within the clinical research field that has creating a large demand for blood fraction samples as well as other clinical samples. The translational research area is another field that demanding for blood samples, used widely in proteomics, genomics, as well as metabolomics. Blood samples are the global most common biological samples that find its use in a broad variety of applications in Life Science. We hereby introduce a new reference blood plasma (EDTA) that is aimed as a global resource for the Proteomics community. We have developed these reference plasma standards by defining the Control group as those with CRP levels <3mg/L and a Disease group with CRP ranges >30 mg/L. In these references we have used both newborn children 1-2 weeks, as well as youngsters 10-15 years, and middle aged 30-50 years, and elderly patients at the ages of 65+. The total number of these reference plasma pools was 80 patients in each group. We provide data on the developments and characteristics of the reference blood plasma standards, as well as what is used by the team members at the respective laboratories. The standards have been evaluated by pilot sample processing in biobanking operations, and are currently a resource that allows the Proteomic society to perform quantitative proteomic studies. By the use of high quality reference plasma samples, global initiatives, such as the Chromosome Human Proteome Project (C-HPP), will benefit as one scientific program when the entire human proteome is mapped and linked to human diseases.}}, author = {{Malm, Johan and Danmyr, Pia and Nilsson, Rolf and Appelqvist, Roger and Végvári, Ákos and Marko-Varga, György}}, issn = {{1535-3893}}, keywords = {{C-HPP; blood plasma reference material}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{7}}, pages = {{3087--3092}}, publisher = {{The American Chemical Society (ACS)}}, series = {{Journal of Proteome Research}}, title = {{Blood Plasma Reference Material – A Global Resource for Proteomic Research}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/pr400131r}}, doi = {{10.1021/pr400131r}}, volume = {{12}}, year = {{2013}}, }