Challenges for proteomics core facilities

Proteomics. 2011 Mar;11(6):1017-25. doi: 10.1002/pmic.201000693. Epub 2011 Feb 16.

Abstract

Many analytical techniques have been executed by core facilities established within academic, pharmaceutical and other industrial institutions. The centralization of such facilities ensures a level of expertise and hardware which often cannot be supported by individual laboratories. The establishment of a core facility thus makes the technology available for multiple researchers in the same institution. Often, the services within the core facility are also opened out to researchers from other institutions, frequently with a fee being levied for the service provided. In the 1990s, with the onset of the age of genomics, there was an abundance of DNA analysis facilities, many of which have since disappeared from institutions and are now available through commercial sources. Ten years on, as proteomics was beginning to be utilized by many researchers, this technology found itself an ideal candidate for being placed within a core facility. We discuss what in our view are the daily challenges of proteomics core facilities. We also examine the potential unmet needs of the proteomics core facility that may also be applicable to proteomics laboratories which do not function as core facilities.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Computational Biology
  • Facility Design and Construction
  • Mass Spectrometry / instrumentation
  • Mass Spectrometry / standards
  • Proteomics / education
  • Proteomics / instrumentation*
  • Proteomics / standards
  • Proteomics / statistics & numerical data
  • Quality Control
  • Research Design