News Articles


A new version 25 of the Human Protein Atlas has been released at the HUPO meeting in Toronto, Canada

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The 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


Watch the HPA version 24 launch webinar from HUPO

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At the HUPO meeting in Dresden, program director Mathias Uhlen and a group of selected researchers presented an overview of the Human Protein Atlas project, with a particular focus on the content of the new version 24...Read more


A version 18.1 release today with new Survival Scatter plots

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A new version 18.1 of the Human Protein Atlas was released today. The new version introduces new features to the Survival Scatter plots in the Pathology Atlas...Read more


Release of Human protein Atlas version 15

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Today, a new version, number 15, of The Human Protein Atlas is launched that includes extensive transcriptomics data and a new display view to allow comparisons of human tissue profiles on both the RNA and protein level. In this new version it is possible to do comparisons of primary data from several sources, including external efforts such as the GTEx dataset generated from the Broad Institute in Boston, US.

The GTEx dataset includes more than 1600 postmortem samples from mostly overlapping, but in some cases unique, tissues compared to the Human Protein Atlas consortium...Read more


Release of HPA14 and the Human Protein Atlas blog

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Focus in version 14 has been to improve validation of the antibodies used to map the human proteome and the inclusion of a new atlas; the Mouse Brain Atlas created by the Fluorescence Tissue Profiling facility at Science for Life Laboratory (SciLifeLab) in Stockholm.

Many of the mouse proteins have extensive homology with the human counterpart and this forms the basis for using the mouse brain as a model for the corresponding human brain to explore the expression and distribution of proteins in the various regions and cells of the brain...Read more