Annotation Conf. Call 2017-02-14: Difference between revisions
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*Annotation Relations | *Annotation Relations | ||
**'''ACTION ITEMS:''' | **'''ACTION ITEMS:''' | ||
#Each annotation group should look at some of their existing BP annotations to see how they would apply the newly proposed qualifiers/relations, particularly acts_upstream_of_or_within, acts_upstream_of, and involved_in_or_involved_in_regulation_of and child terms. Is it always clear which relation to use? If not, when is it not clear? | #Each annotation group should look at some of their existing BP annotations to see how they would apply the newly proposed qualifiers/relations, particularly acts_upstream_of_or_within, acts_upstream_of, and involved_in_or_involved_in_regulation_of and child terms. Is it always clear which relation to use? If not, when is it not clear? If new information is now available about how a gene product acts, do existing annotations still apply? | ||
#Construct LEGO models to create usage examples for the corresponding relations. | #Construct LEGO models to create usage examples for the corresponding relations. | ||
[[Category: Annotation Working Group]] | [[Category: Annotation Working Group]] |
Revision as of 13:59, 14 February 2017
Bluejeans URL
Agenda
Meeting Reminder
- Next Consortium Meeting: June 1-3, 2017 in Corvallis, Oregon
- Noctua Workshop on June 4th
- Reactome Workshop on June 5th
Qualifiers and Relations in GO
- Qualifiers are used in GAF and GPAD
- Modify the meaning of the association between a gene/gene product and GO term
- colocalizes_with
- contributes_to
- NOT
- Documentation on Qualifier Use
- Relations are used in GPAD, Annotation Extensions, and LEGO models
- In GPAD, the explicit relations between a gene/gene product and GO terms are ontology-specific:
- involved_in a BP
- enables a MF
- part_of a CC
- Annotation extension relations 'extend' the meaning of the GO term, providing additional biological context
- For example, nucleus part_of(body wall muscle cell) or protein localization to nucleus has_input(pcf2)
- See Huntley and Lovering, 2016 and Huntley et al., 2014
- In LEGO models, relations describe the context in which activities (GO MFs) occur and how activities relate to one another
- In GPAD, the explicit relations between a gene/gene product and GO terms are ontology-specific:
New Relations for Modifying a Gene's Role in a Biological Process
- This issue is about adding more relations to the list that curators currently use to describe the relationship between a gene/gene product and a BP GO term, again, with the overall goal being a more accurate representation of biology.
- We have talked about doing something like this for some time wrt conventional annotations, and we need them to translate LEGO annotations back to GPAD/GAF formats.
- The current proposal is to add the following relations to the 'qualifier' column of GAF and GPAD to better describe the relationship between a gene product and a GO term:
- acts_upstream_of_or_within
- acts_upstream_of
- involved_in_regulation_of
- involved_in_or_involved_in_regulation_of
- involved_in
- involved_in_regulation_of
- involved_in_negative_regulation_of
- involved_in_positive_regulation_of
- acts_upstream_of
- acts_upstream_of_or_within
- Note the differences between the relations for GAF/GPAD and the relations used in LEGO models due to the nature of what is being related, i.e. gene to GO term in the former and GO term to another GO term in LEGO.
- Example translation:
- LEGO: 'causally upstream of'
- GAF/GPAD: 'acts upstream of'
- Example translation:
- For discussion:
- Use of 'within' vs 'involved_in'
- 'within' is used in the top level relation, but 'involved_in' in child terms
- Should one or the other be used throughout?
- Definitions
- Necessary formal definitions exist, but curators would like guidance on how experimental results inform selection of a given relation
- For example, 'causally upstream of or within' has a formal definition:
- p 'causally upstream or within' q iff (1) the end of p is before the end of q and (2) the execution of p exerts some causal influence over the outputs of q; i.e. if p was abolished or the outputs of p were to be modified, this would necessarily affect q.
- This relation has a related synonym - 'affects'
- LEGO GPAD outputs
- How will LEGO annotations translate back to GPAD annotations, specifically wrt regulates relations?
- GAF/GPAD output working group meets on Wednesdays at 7am PST to discuss output of different LEGO models
- The particular issue wrt regulates and regulation is being worked on
- Where can curators view all of the relations used in GO, their definitions, and usage statements and examples?
- See email thread from last week with subject: documentation for AE
- We need clear, vetted examples of usage in LEGO.
- Use of 'within' vs 'involved_in'
Jenkins Jobs
- GOC-OWL Inference Pipeline
- Currently suspended?
February 28th Call
- Discussion of LEGO Models
- Sabrina (ZFIN)
- Midori (PomBase)
Minutes
- On call: Alice, Chris, David H, David OS, Edith, George, Giulia, Helen, Jim, Kimberly, Midori, Moni, Olivia, Pascale, Petra, Rachael, Stacia, Stan, Suzi, Tanya, Terry, Val
- GOC Meeting
- Corvallis, OR - Please register
- Need to get more information from Reactome about what their workshop will entail
- Ontology Editor Training
- Berkeley, February 22-24, 2017
- Chris and David H. will lead the workshop
- Attending: Karen, Harold, Kimberly, Pascale
- Annotation Relations
- ACTION ITEMS:
- Each annotation group should look at some of their existing BP annotations to see how they would apply the newly proposed qualifiers/relations, particularly acts_upstream_of_or_within, acts_upstream_of, and involved_in_or_involved_in_regulation_of and child terms. Is it always clear which relation to use? If not, when is it not clear? If new information is now available about how a gene product acts, do existing annotations still apply?
- Construct LEGO models to create usage examples for the corresponding relations.