Translational Psychiatry (May 2024)

ProMENDA: an updated resource for proteomic and metabolomic characterization in depression

  • Juncai Pu,
  • Yue Yu,
  • Yiyun Liu,
  • Dongfang Wang,
  • Siwen Gui,
  • Xiaogang Zhong,
  • Weiyi Chen,
  • Xiaopeng Chen,
  • Yue Chen,
  • Xiang Chen,
  • Renjie Qiao,
  • Yanyi Jiang,
  • Hanping Zhang,
  • Li Fan,
  • Yi Ren,
  • Xiangyu Chen,
  • Haiyang Wang,
  • Peng Xie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-024-02948-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Depression is a prevalent mental disorder with a complex biological mechanism. Following the rapid development of systems biology technology, a growing number of studies have applied proteomics and metabolomics to explore the molecular profiles of depression. However, a standardized resource facilitating the identification and annotation of the available knowledge from these scattered studies associated with depression is currently lacking. This study presents ProMENDA, an upgraded resource that provides a platform for manual annotation of candidate proteins and metabolites linked to depression. Following the establishment of the protein dataset and the update of the metabolite dataset, the ProMENDA database was developed as a major extension of its initial release. A multi-faceted annotation scheme was employed to provide comprehensive knowledge of the molecules and studies. A new web interface was also developed to improve the user experience. The ProMENDA database now contains 43,366 molecular entries, comprising 20,847 protein entries and 22,519 metabolite entries, which were manually curated from 1370 human, rat, mouse, and non-human primate studies. This represents a significant increase (more than 7-fold) in molecular entries compared to the initial release. To demonstrate the usage of ProMENDA, a case study identifying consistently reported proteins and metabolites in the brains of animal models of depression was presented. Overall, ProMENDA is a comprehensive resource that offers a panoramic view of proteomic and metabolomic knowledge in depression. ProMENDA is freely available at https://menda.cqmu.edu.cn .