Definition:
Proteomics is something new in
the field of biotechnology. It is basically the study of the proteome, the
collective body of proteins made y a person's cells and tissues. Since it is
proteins, and to a much lesser extent, other types of biological molecules that
are directly involved in both normal and diseaseassociated biochemical
processes, a more complete understanding of the disease may be gained by
directly looking at the proteins present within a diseased cell or tissue and
this is achieved through the study of the proteome, Proteomics. For, Proteomics,
we need 2-D electrophoresis equipment ot separate the proteins, mass
spectrometry to identify them and x-ray crystallography to know more of the
structure and function of the proteins. These equipments are essential in the
study of proteomics.
From The Genome To The
Proteome:
Genomics has provided a vast
amount of information linking gene activity with disease. It is now recognized
that gene sequence information and pattern of gene activity in a cell do not
provide a complete and accurate profile of a protein's abundance or its final
structure and state of activity. The day of spotlight of the human genome is
now coming to an end. Researchers are now concentrating on the human proteome,
the collective body of all the proteins made by a person's cells and tissues.
The genome- the full set of information in the body-contains only the recipes
for making proteins; it is the proteins that constitute the bricks and mortar
of cells and that do most of the work. Moreover it is the proteins that
distinguish the various types of cells: although all cells have essentially the
same genome, they can vary in which genes are active and thus in which proteins
are made. Likewise diseased cells often produce proteins that healthy cells
don't and vice versa. Proteome research permits the discovery of new protein
markers for diagnostic purposes and of novel molecular targets for drug
discovery.
Proteins
All living things contain
proteins. The structure of a cell is largely built of proteins. Proteins are
complex, three-dimensional substances composed of one or more long, folded
polypeptide chains. These chains, in turn, consist of small chemical units
called amino acids. There are twenty kinds of amino acids involved in protein
production, and any number of them may be linked in any order to form the
polypeptide chain.
The order of the amino acids in the polypeptide chain is
decided by the information contained in DNA structure of the cell's genes.
Following this translation, most proteins are chemically changed through post-translation
modification (PTM), mainly through the addition of carbohydrate and phosphate
groups. Such modification plays an important role in modulating the function of
many proteins but the genes do not code it.
As a consequence, the information
from a single gene can encode as many as fifty different protein species. It is
clear that genomic information often does not provide an accurate profile of
protein abundance, structure and activity.
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