inquiry/wheat (fwd) (PR#7)
Bruskiewich, Richard (IRRI)
r.bruskiewich at cgiar.org
Thu May 13 01:05:49 EDT 2004
Diane Mather of McGill University, Canada is interested in this. A wheat
ontology will also be relevant to the Generation Challenge Program. CIMMYT
will probably guide that effort.
Richard
-----Original Message-----
From: Katica Ilic [mailto:jitterbug at plantontology.org]
Sent: Thursday, May 13, 2004 3:18 AM
To: a.garcia at imb.uq.edu.au
Cc: po-dev at plantontology.org
Subject: Re: inquiry/wheat (fwd) (PR#7)
Dear Garcia,
I am not aware of any ongoing effort in the public sector with respect to
developing anatomy and developmental stages ontologies specifically for
wheat.
However, Gramene has a Cereal Plant Anatomy ontology (the controlled
vocabulary of plant anatomy representing organs, tissues and cell types),
and Cereal Plant Growth Stages ontology (the controlled vocabulary of growth
and developmental stages; examples are germination, seedling, booting,
flowering, etc.), available for rice, maize, sorghum, wheat, oat and barley.
You can download and browse these two ontologies on our POC web site or at
Gramene.
Currently, we are in the process of integrating Arabidopsis and cereal
ontologies into generic plant anatomy ontology. The first version of the
ontology will be released in the summer. We hope to make it applicable to
most of the flowering plants. Furthermore, over the next two years, POC
project will expand its plant-ontology-development effort to include other
crops such as wheat, barley, tomato legumes and cotton. At the end, the
controlled vocabularies developed by the POC will be generic enough to
encompass/cover all the plant model systems; this includes
cereals/brassicas/solanaceae/gossypium/legumes.
The short answer to your question about the ontology editing tool, Protégé
is no, we don't use it for our Plant anatomy ontology, and I am not sure how
widely this tool is used for biological ontologies. Instead, we use the
DAG-edit, which is also a standard editor for GO
(http://www.geneontology.org). Arabidopsis, Gramene and maize ontologies
that you have seen on the POC web site, are all edited using DAG editor.
I have recently communicated with Shenghui Wang from UK
(wangs at cs.man.ac.uk), who was telling me that he uses Protégé for building
the ontology for Ranunculus, so my suggestion to you is to contact him. He
might be able to give you some specific information about the Protege.
Unfortunately, I don't have any experience with this tool, but from what I
understood, this ontology editor has only IS_A relationship type, which can
be seen as a kind_of relationship type.
The DAG edit has three relationship types describing the component/location
(PART_OF), class (INSTANCE OF) and lineage (DERIVED_FROM). You can see
example for each relationship type on our web site
(http://www.plantontology.org/docs/otherdocs/poc_file.html).
Thank you for your interest in POC and plant ontologies. For additional
questions about our project, plant ontologies and editing tools, please feel
free to contact me directly or send us an email at po at plantontology.org.
Best regards,
Katica Ilic, POC curator
>Date: Tue, 11 May 2004 23:39:06 +1000
> From: a.garcia at imb.uq.edu.au
> Reply-To: po-dev at plantontology.org
> To: po at plantontology.org
> Subject: inquiry/wheat
>
> I would like to know if there is an ontology for wheat; I would also
> like to know if someone has ported the plant ontology to protege.
> cheers
>
>
Katica Ilic, TAIR Curator, E-mail: katica at acoma.stanford.edu
The Arabidopsis Information Resource Tel: (650) 325-1521 ext. 253
Carnegie Institution of Washington Fax: (650) 325-6857
Department of Plant Biology URL: http://arabidopsis.org/
260 Panama St.
Stanford, CA 94305, U.S.A.
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