PROTEOMICS

Cover image for Vol. 16 Issue 7

April 2016

Volume 16, Issue 7

Pages 1047–1190

  1. Cover Picture

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
    1. You have free access to this content
      Cover Picture: Proteomics 7'16

      Version of Record online: 4 APR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201670070

      Thumbnail image of graphical abstract
  2. Editorial Board

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
    1. You have free access to this content
      Editorial Board: Proteomics 7'16

      Version of Record online: 4 APR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201670071

  3. Contents

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
    1. You have free access to this content
      Contents: Proteomics 7'16

      Version of Record online: 4 APR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201670072

  4. HUPO Highlights

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
    1. Key players in neurodegenerative disorders in focus—New insights into the proteomic profile of Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, ALS, and multiple sclerosis—24th HUPO BPP Workshop (pages 1047–1050)

      Andreas Schrötter, Young Mok Park, Katrin Marcus, Daniel Martins-de-Souza, Peter Nilsson, Fouzi El Magraoui, Helmut E. Meyer and Lea T. Grinberg

      Version of Record online: 4 APR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201600047

  5. Technology

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
  6. Cell Biology

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
    1. Phosphoproteome analysis demonstrates the potential role of THRAP3 phosphorylation in androgen-independent prostate cancer cell growth (pages 1069–1078)

      Yoko Ino, Noriaki Arakawa, Hitoshi Ishiguro, Hiroji Uemura, Yoshinobu Kubota, Hisashi Hirano and Tosifusa Toda

      Version of Record online: 4 APR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500365

    2. Identification of 14-3-3zeta associated protein networks in oral cancer (pages 1079–1089)

      Ajay Matta, Olena Masui, K. W. Michael Siu and Ranju Ralhan

      Version of Record online: 17 MAR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500489

  7. Microbiology

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
    1. Viability, morphology, and proteome of Mycobacterium smegmatis MSMEG_0319 knockout strain (pages 1090–1099)

      Shanshan Sha, Xiaoxia Shi, Liming Xu, Jiabin Wen, Yi Xin and Yufang Ma

      Version of Record online: 29 MAR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500054

    2. Proteome targets of ubiquitin-like samp1ylation are associated with sulfur metabolism and oxidative stress in Haloferax volcanii (pages 1100–1110)

      Swathi Dantuluri, Yifei Wu, Nathaniel L. Hepowit, Hui Chen, Sixue Chen and Julie A. Maupin-Furlow

      Version of Record online: 4 APR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500153

  8. Plant Proteomics

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
    1. Proteomic analysis of a compatible interaction between sugarcane and Sporisorium scitamineum (pages 1111–1122)

      Leonard Barnabas, N. M. R. Ashwin, K. Kaverinathan, Anna Rita Trentin, Micaela Pivato, A. Ramesh Sundar, P. Malathi, R. Viswanathan, O. B. Rosana, K. Neethukrishna, Paolo Carletti, Giorgio Arrigoni, Antonio Masi, Ganesh Kumar Agrawal and Randeep Rakwal

      Version of Record online: 4 APR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500245

  9. Animal Proteomics

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
    1. Impact of genetic variation on synaptic protein levels in genetically diverse mice (pages 1123–1130)

      Maarten Loos, Ka Wan Li, Roel van der Schors, Yvonne Gouwenberg, Rolinka van der Loo, Robert W. Williams, August B. Smit and Sabine Spijker

      Version of Record online: 10 MAR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500154

    2. Proteomic profiling of dextran sulfate sodium induced acute ulcerative colitis mice serum exosomes and their immunomodulatory impact on macrophages (pages 1131–1145)

      Wing-Yan Wong, Magnolia Muk-Lan Lee, Brandon Dow Chan, Richard Kin-Tin Kam, Ge Zhang, Ai-Ping Lu and William Chi-Shing Tai

      Version of Record online: 4 APR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500174

  10. Biomedicine

    1. Top of page
    2. Cover Picture
    3. Editorial Board
    4. Contents
    5. HUPO Highlights
    6. Technology
    7. Cell Biology
    8. Microbiology
    9. Plant Proteomics
    10. Animal Proteomics
    11. Biomedicine
    1. Dataset Brief

      Defining the proteome of human iris, ciliary body, retinal pigment epithelium, and choroid (pages 1146–1153)

      Pingbo Zhang, David Kirby, Craig Dufresne, Yan Chen, Randi Turner, Sara Ferri, Deepak P. Edward, Jennifer E. Van Eyk and Richard D. Semba

      Version of Record online: 11 MAR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500188

    2. Label-free analysis of human cerebrospinal fluid addressing various normalization strategies and revealing protein groups affected by multiple sclerosis (pages 1154–1165)

      Jill A. Opsahl, Marc Vaudel, Astrid Guldbrandsen, Elise Aasebø, Vincent Van Pesch, Diego Franciotta, Kjell-Morten Myhr, Harald Barsnes, Magnus Berle, Øivind Torkildsen, Ann C. Kroksveen and Frode S. Berven

      Version of Record online: 4 APR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500284

    3. Quantitative proteomics suggests metabolic reprogramming during ETHE1 deficiency (pages 1166–1176)

      Navid Sahebekhtiari, Michelle M. Thomsen, Jens J. Sloth, Vibeke Stenbroen, Massimo Zeviani, Niels Gregersen, Carlo Viscomi and Johan Palmfeldt

      Version of Record online: 16 MAR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500336

    4. Exposure of CCRF-CEM cells to acridone derivative 8a triggers tumor death via multiple mechanisms (pages 1177–1190)

      Yini Wang, Dan Gao, Bizhu Chu, Chunmei Gao, Deliang Cao, Hongxia Liu and Yuyang Jiang

      Version of Record online: 14 MAR 2016 | DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500317

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