News ArticlesNobel prize-winning FOXP3 in the spotlightThis year's Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine was awarded to Mary E. Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell and Shimon Sakaguchi for their discoveries concerning peripheral immune tolerance and regulatory T cells. These immune cells play an important role in protecting us from autoimmune diseases, and key to their development and function is the transcription factor FOXP3...Read more What sparked excitement at HUPO 2025At the 24th HUPO World Congress in Toronto, the theme "One Health Powered by Proteomics" emphasized the deep interconnectedness of humans, animals, microbes, and environments. In an article in Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News, Gustav Ceder shares his impressions from this world congress together with thoughts and perspectives from some of the big players in the proteomics field...Read more HPA poster selected finalist at HUPO: Mapping the hidden architecture of the human ovary in 3DAt the annual Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) meeting in Toronto, 25 HPA-affiliated members contributed more than 25 talks and posters across sessions. Among them was Loren Méar, researcher in the HPA and a postdoc working both in Pauliina Damdimopoulou's group at Karolinska Institutet and Cecilia Lindskog's lab at Uppsala University. Loren was selected as a poster competition finalist for her work "Spatial proteomics uncovers structural and molecular complexity of the human ovary in 2D and 3D."..Read more Multiplex tissue image of the month - TMEM52B in kidneyThis month, specific expression of Transmembrane protein 52B (gene: TMEM52B) in distal tubules in the kidney is highlighted with multiplex immunohistochemistry (mIHC/IF)...Read more A new version 25 of the Human Protein Atlas has been released at the HUPO meeting in Toronto, CanadaThe version 25 of the Human Protein Atlas has been launched with lots of additional data and new features. Data corresponding to all human protein-coding genes is presented in 9 different resources including protein profiles in cells, tissues, organs and blood. The open access resource now includes more than 10 million manually annotated bioimages and data for over 6 billion assay measurements from 300,000 separate biological samples...Read more |