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- Technical Aspects of Clinical Proteomics
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1. Proteomic technologies and targets: an overview
- Dr. Walter Kolch
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2. A concept for multi-marker approaches in clinical proteomics
- Dr. Bernd Mayer
- Disease-Specific Aspects of Clinical Proteomics
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3. Urinary proteomics in kidney and cardiovascular disease
- Prof. Harald Mischak
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4. Proteomics in diabetic kidney disease
- Prof. Peter Rossing
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5. Proteomics in cardiovascular disease: clinical considerations
- Dr. Christian Delles
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6. Clinical proteomics in the investigation of bladder cancer
- Prof. Antonia Vlahou
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7. Application of proteomics in fetal and neonatal medicine
- Dr. Joost P. Schanstra
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8. Clinical proteomics in neurodegenerative disease
- Dr. Holger Jahn
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9. Clinical proteomics in gastrointestinal cancers
- Dr. Jochen Metzger
- Archived Lectures *These may not cover the latest advances in the field
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10. Proteomics in kidney disease: clinical considerations
- Prof. Peter Rossing
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Mammals are complex organisms
- Microscopic structures reveal high complexity
- Single biomarkers are of limited specificity
- Limited precision of single marker X
- Increased precision of two markers, X and Y
- Higher precision of 3 markers, X, Y and Z
- Omics technologies or: why proteomics?
- Clinical proteomics: recommended steps
- Clinical diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy
- The course of diabetic nephropathy
- Why urine?
- Why not blood?
- Technology platforms: 2DE-MS
- Technology platforms: LC-MS-MS
- Technology platforms: CE/MS
- CE/MS movie
- CE/MS data flow
- Graphical depiction of CE/MS analysis
- Human urinary LMW proteome database
- Requirements for biomarker selection
- Classification using n-dimensional models
- Valid biomarkers and biomarker models
- How to identify valid proteomic biomarkers (1)
- How to identify valid proteomic biomarkers (2)
- Effect size estimation and the number of samples
- Erroneous biomarkers
- Sample size reflects the number of biomarkers
- Classification using different sizes of training sets
- Classification error depends on sample size
- Example
- Proteomic CKD biomarker discovery
- CKD-biomarkers and their regulation (1)
- CKD-biomarkers and their regulation (2)
- Biomarker validation
- Pathophysiological suggestions
- Selected urinary peptides and CKD staging
- DN progression in diabetes type 2 patients
- Prediction of DN
- CKD biomarker profile vs. AER for DN detection
- Multicentric European PRIORITY trial
- Coronary artery disease
- Proteomics of coronary artery disease
- Assessment of therapy success
- Results
- Summary
Topics Covered
- Omics technologies
- Technology platforms: (2DE-MS, LC-MS-MS, CE/MS)
- Clinical proteomics
- Precision as a function of no. of markers
- Human urinary LMW proteome database
- Requirements for biomarker selection
- How to identify valid proteomic biomarkers
- Effect size estimation and the number of samples
- Erroneous biomarkers
- Classification using different sizes of training sets
- Classification errors
- CKD biomarkers
- Biomarker validation
- Pathophysiological suggestions
- Selected urinary peptides and CKD staging
- Multicentric European PRIORITY trial
- Proteomics of coronary artery disease and of diabetic nephropathy
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Mischak, H. (2013, November 5). Urinary proteomics in kidney and cardiovascular disease [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved May 11, 2025, from https://doi.org/10.69645/BTPJ2409.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
- Published on November 5, 2013
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Harald Mischak, Stock Shareholder (Self-managed): Mosaiques Diagnostics.