Technological Innovation and Resources
GProX, a User-Friendly Platform for Bioinformatics Analysis and Visualization of Quantitative Proteomics Data*

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Recent technological advances have made it possible to identify and quantify thousands of proteins in a single proteomics experiment. As a result of these developments, the analysis of data has become the bottleneck of proteomics experiment. To provide the proteomics community with a user-friendly platform for comprehensive analysis, inspection and visualization of quantitative proteomics data we developed the Graphical Proteomics Data Explorer (GProX)1. The program requires no special bioinformatics training, as all functions of GProX are accessible within its graphical user-friendly interface which will be intuitive to most users. Basic features facilitate the uncomplicated management and organization of large data sets and complex experimental setups as well as the inspection and graphical plotting of quantitative data. These are complemented by readily available high-level analysis options such as database querying, clustering based on abundance ratios, feature enrichment tests for e.g. GO terms and pathway analysis tools. A number of plotting options for visualization of quantitative proteomics data is available and most analysis functions in GProX create customizable high quality graphical displays in both vector and bitmap formats. The generic import requirements allow data originating from essentially all mass spectrometry platforms, quantitation strategies and software to be analyzed in the program. GProX represents a powerful approach to proteomics data analysis providing proteomics experimenters with a toolbox for bioinformatics analysis of quantitative proteomics data. The program is released as open-source and can be freely downloaded from the project webpage at http://gprox.sourceforge.net.

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*

The work was supported by the Lundbeck Foundation (B. B. - Junior Group Leader Fellowship), the Danish Natural Science Research Council and the European Commission's 7th Framework Programme (HEALTH-F4-2008-201648/PROSPECTS). J. T. V. is supported by an EMBO Long Term Fellowship (ALTF 1267-2009).

This article contains supplemental Methods, References, and Figs. S1 to S7.

1

The abbreviations used are:

    GProX

    Graphical Proteomics Data Explorer

    EGF

    epidermal growth factor

    GO

    Gene Ontology

    HGF

    hepatocyte growth factor

    KEGG

    Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes

    OS

    operating system

    SPIA

    Signaling Pathway Impact Analysis.