TAIR Nov2011: Difference between revisions

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* '''GO terms contributed by TAIR'''  
* '''GO terms contributed by TAIR'''  


'''NEEDS UPDATE'''
Donghui Li has submitted 42 SourceForge term requests on behalf of TAIR curators from December 2010 to December 2011 (each request may contain multiple terms). Of these 42 requests, 41 have been closed. 39 new GO terms have been created, 18 terms are updated (definition, parentage, obsolete etc).  
Donghui Li has submitted 58 SourceForge term requests on behalf of TAIR curators from December 2009 to December 2010 (each request may contain multiple terms). Of these 58 requests, 52 have been closed. 56 new GO terms have been created.


* '''Other ontology development work'''
* '''Other ontology development work'''

Revision as of 13:13, 3 November 2011

TAIR, The Arabidopsis Information Resource, November 2011

IN PROGRESS NOT YET DONE


Statement of Year 11 objectives (March 1, 2011 – February 29, 2012)

1. Staff working on GOC tasks

Tanya Berardini, Donghui Li

The total number of FTE working on GOC tasks is 1.4.

2. Annotation progress

Table 1: Number of Annotations to Various GO Aspects

Annotations BP (12/10) BP (11/02/11) change MF (12/10) MF (11/02/11) change CC (12/10) CC (11/02/11) change
non-IEA/non-ND 17690 19401 + 11711 11219 12293 + 1074 19841 24348 + 4507
IEA 12095 11276 - 819 19293 18479 - 814 10505 8335 - 2170
ND 9875 9904 + 29 5060 5271 + 211 10237 9120 - 1117

Table 2: Number of Genes Annotated to Various GO Aspects IN PROGRESS

Genes BP (12/10) BP (12/09) change MF (12/10) MF (12/09) change CC (12/10) CC (12/09) change
non-IEA/non-ND 7981 7385 + 533 7189 6988 + 201 7619 7378 + 241
IEA 6973 6807 + 166 7924 8135 - 211 7538 7783 - 245
ND 9875 14284 - 4409 5059 8812 - 3753 10233 14497 - 4264
  • Numbers of ND annotations/genes annotated decreased as annotations to pseudogenes and transposable element genes were removed after a QC check revealed that these existed.

3. Methods and strategies for annotation

a. Literature curation: We continue to put most of our effort (95%) into annotation of gene products from the literature.

b. Computational annotation strategies: With every genome release, we run two computational GO annotation pipelines, one based on INTERPROtoGO mapping and the other based on a TargetP analysis. These results are integrated into our GO annotation file. This represents roughly 5% of our annotation effort.

c. Integration of non-TAIR Arabidopsis annotations: We integrate the following files into our gene association file so that Arabidopsis annotations, regardless of original source, are now relayed to GO via TAIR with the appropriate source attribution.

 1. Experimental code GOA Arabidopsis GO annotations
 2. PAINT-based annotations from RefGenome group
 3. Function-Process link based annotations from GOC 

d. Priorities for annotation:

 1. literature of any age pertaining to Reference Genome genes, 
 2. literature describing the characterization of previously undescribed ('novel') genes, 
 3. genes that do not have any GO annotations at all (none of the three aspects),
 4. recent literature from high impact factor journals

e. Integration of community submitted GO annotations: These are added into the TAIR database after curator review. Curator review takes less time than curation of the paper itself, though the level of detail to which the submitter adds information may be less than that of the curator.

4. Presentations and publications

Publications,_Talks,_Posters_2010-

5. Other Highlights

A. Ontology Development Contributions

  • GO terms contributed by TAIR

Donghui Li has submitted 42 SourceForge term requests on behalf of TAIR curators from December 2010 to December 2011 (each request may contain multiple terms). Of these 42 requests, 41 have been closed. 39 new GO terms have been created, 18 terms are updated (definition, parentage, obsolete etc).

  • Other ontology development work

Tanya Berardini:

  • worked on a team with David Hill, Harold Drabkin, Chris Mungall, Midori Harris, Jane Lomax and ChEBI curators to align GO with ChEBI. This will result in the first set of cross-products with GO and an external ontology. The group also has a manuscript describing the collaborative work ready for submission in the next month
  • acts as the gatekeeper for the TermGenie requests, merging and committing these into the main ontology using the scripts written by Chris Mungall.

B. Annotation outreach and user advocacy efforts

  • TAIR/Journal collaboration

The collaboration to collect functional information about Arabidopsis genes from authors at the time of submission includes ten journals (Plant Physiology, Plant Cell, The Plant Journal, Molecular Plant, Journal of Experimental Botany, Plant Science, Plant, Cell and Environment, Environmental Botany, Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, and the Journal of Integrative Plant Biology). Our online data submission tool for collecting structured annotations to GO and PO terms is available here:

TAIR Online Annotation Submission Tool(TOAST)

TAIR can accept annotations based on any journal article, regardless of the journal it was published in, provided that the article has a DOI or a PMID. Submitters must be registered at TAIR.

We have a manuscript in preparation that describes the community annotation effort and analyzes annotations made by the community.


  • GO help

Tanya Berardini continues to participate in manning the GO helpdesk. This involves answering the questions that come in through gohelp@geneontology.org or forwarding them to the appropriate parties for response. There are 11 GOC curators that rotate this task, one week at a time.


C. Other highlights - none