PXD070177 is an
original dataset announced via ProteomeXchange.
Dataset Summary
| Title | Targets of K27 polyubiquitin in the female hippocampus following contextual fear conditioning |
| Description | Targets of K27 polyubiquitin in the female hippocampus following contextual fear conditioning |
| HostingRepository | PRIDE |
| AnnounceDate | 2026-03-31 |
| AnnouncementXML | Submission_2026-03-30_16:01:16.715.xml |
| DigitalObjectIdentifier | |
| ReviewLevel | Peer-reviewed dataset |
| DatasetOrigin | Original dataset |
| RepositorySupport | Unsupported dataset by repository |
| PrimarySubmitter | Keith Ray |
| SpeciesList | scientific name: Rattus norvegicus (Rat); NCBI TaxID: NEWT:10116; |
| ModificationList | ubiquitinylated lysine |
| Instrument | Bruker Daltonics timsTOF series |
Dataset History
| Revision | Datetime | Status | ChangeLog Entry |
| 0 | 2025-10-31 17:51:02 | ID requested | |
| ⏵ 1 | 2026-03-30 16:01:17 | announced | |
Publication List
| Dataset with its publication pending |
Keyword List
| submitter keyword: K27, sex differences, hippocampus, ubiquitin |
Contact List
| Timothy J. Jarome |
| contact affiliation | Department of Animal and Poultry Sciences and the School of Neuroscience, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA |
| contact email | tjjarome@vt.edu |
| lab head | |
| Keith Ray |
| contact affiliation | Virginia Tech |
| contact email | wkray@vt.edu |
| dataset submitter | |
Full Dataset Link List
Dataset FTP location
NOTE: Most web browsers have now discontinued native support for FTP access within the browser window. But you can usually install another FTP app (we recommend FileZilla) and configure your browser to launch the external application when you click on this FTP link. Or otherwise, launch an app that supports FTP (like FileZilla) and use this address: ftp://ftp.pride.ebi.ac.uk/pride/data/archive/2026/03/PXD070177 |
| PRIDE project URI |
Repository Record List
[ + ]
[ - ]
- PRIDE
- PXD070177
- Label: PRIDE project
- Name: Targets of K27 polyubiquitin in the female hippocampus following contextual fear conditioning