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A User’s Guide to GO: Structural and Functional Annotation

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1 A User’s Guide to GO: Structural and Functional Annotation

2 Genomic Annotation Genome annotation is the process of attaching biological information to genomic sequences. It consists of two main steps: identifying functional elements in the genome: “structural annotation” attaching biological information to these elements: “functional annotation” biologists often use the term “annotation” when they are referring only to structural annotation

3 Structural annotation:
DNA annotation CHICK_OLF6 Protein annotation TRAF 1, 2 and 3 TRAF 1 and 2 Data from Ensembl Genome browser

4 Functional annotation:
catenin

5 Structural & Functional Annotation
Structural Annotation: Open reading frames (ORFs) predicted during genome assembly predicted ORFs require experimental confirmation the Sequence Ontology (SO) provides a structured controlled vocabulary for sequence annotation Functional Annotation: annotation of gene products = Gene Ontology (GO) annotation initially, predicted ORFs have no functional literature and GO annotation relies on computational methods (rapid) functional literature exists for many genes/proteins prior to genome sequencing GO annotation does not rely on a completed genome sequence!

6 Genomic Annotation Ontologies
Ontologies define classes of biological terms & show how they relate to each other human readable term names computer mineable (large datasets) Structural annotation: Sequence Ontology (SO) Functional annotation: Gene Ontology (GO) molecular function, biological process, cellular process


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