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GoogleCodeExporter avatar GoogleCodeExporter commented on August 21, 2024
Only one main protein accession needs to be provided. The others can be members 
of the ambiguity_members. This was done in a very generic way for the sake of 
simplicity. This is the definition of "ambiguity_members":

A comma-delimited list of protein accessions. This field should be set in the
representative protein of the ambiguity group (the protein identified through 
the
accession in the first column). The accessions listed in this field should 
identify
proteins that could also be identified through these peptides but were not
chosen by the researcher or resource. The members of the ambiguity group
are not reported in the protein table for the respective unit. The exact
semantics of how the ambiguity members were defined depends on the
resource.

The only way to report all protein accessions the peptide maps to with the same 
hierarchy is replicating the same peptide element in different rows.

Original comment by [email protected] on 30 Nov 2012 at 4:42

from mztab.

GoogleCodeExporter avatar GoogleCodeExporter commented on August 21, 2024
Thanks for the clarification!

The "ambiguity_members" column addresses slightly different problem. There 
could be peptides shared by the unambiguously identified proteins.

Of course, it's possible to duplicate the peptide information per each protein, 
but that would increase the size of the file and there is a chance (or, at 
least, confusion) that quantitative information would differ between the rows 
describing the same peptide. BTW, does the specification impose somewhere the 
uniqueness constraint on peptides table (i.e. specify "compound unique key")?

Original comment by [email protected] on 30 Nov 2012 at 5:03

from mztab.

GoogleCodeExporter avatar GoogleCodeExporter commented on August 21, 2024
Yes, one entry in the peptide table ("one peptide") must only be assigned to 
one protein. The "accession" column must only contain one single protein 
accession. So the relation peptide->protein is unique. Of course, one protein 
can have multiple peptides with the exact same sequence (if identified from 
different spectra for example).

BTW, there is no unique key defined for the peptide table. 

Original comment by [email protected] on 2 Dec 2012 at 9:03

from mztab.

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