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The OBO Foundry Chris Mungall Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory NCBO GO Consortium May 2007
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The Open Biomedical Ontologies (OBO) Foundry A collection of orthogonal reference ontologies in the biological/biomedical domain Each is committed to an agreed upon set of principles governing best practices in ontology development
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Outline Motivation History/Background Organisation and dependencies Foundry Principles Results
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http://obofoundry.org http://www.bioontologies.org (NCBO)
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Why is the OBO Foundry necessary? For the sharing, integration and analysis of biological and biomedical data Common standards are required Ontologies must be interoperable and logically well-formed Ontologies should be developed collaboratively
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Origins of OBO: The Gene Ontology (GO) 3 ontologies intended primarily for the annotation of genes and gene products across a spectrum of organisms Molecular function Biological process Cellular component These ontologies are organised as a collection of related terms, constituting nodes in a graph
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Annotation and GO 187,000 genes and gene products have high quality annotations to GO terms 2.6m including automated predictions 63,000 publications curated Variety of analysis tools http://www.geneontology.org/GO.tools.shtml#micr o http://www.geneontology.org/GO.tools.shtml#micr o Annotation of primary and literature data is one use of OBO Foundry ontologies
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GO and the need for OBO GO terms implicitly reference kinds of entities outwith the scope of GO Cysteine biosynthesis Neural crest cell migration Cardiac muscle morphogenesis Regulation of vascular permeability OBO was born from the need to create cross products wth GO Also coincided with growth in model organism anatomy ontologies ChEBI Cell Anatomy quality
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Organisation of the OBO Foundry Ontologies should be orthogonal Minimise overlap Each distinct entity type (universal) should only be represented once We can partition the OBO Foundry rationally to help organise and coordinate the ontologies
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Partitions Type of entity Relationship to time Continuant Occurrent Dependent or independent Granularity Molecular Cellular Organismal Multi-organismal Generality Upper domain ontology Core biology Species specific Occurrence Canonical Variant Pathological Experimental
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Connecting the Foundry: The OBO Relation Ontology Standardized set of formally defined relations between types and/or instances is_a part_of has_participant … For use within and across OBO ontologies http://obofoundry.org/ro http://obofoundry.org/ro Molecules and cells participate in cellular processes Cellular components are parts of cells which are parts of larger anatomical entities Phenotypic qualities inhere in anatomical entities
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OBO Foundry Principles Open Well-defined exchange format E.g. OBO or OWL Unique ID-Space Ontology Life-cycle / versioning Clearly specified and delineated content Definitions Use relations according to the standards of the OBO Relation Ontology Well documented Plurality of users Collaborative development http://obofoundry.org/crit.shtml
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Results Phenotype Annotation Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI) GO cross-products Anatomy Ontologies Semantic Web Health Care and Life Sciences (HCLS) interest group
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Genotype-Phenotype Annotation NCBO Driving Biological Project Deep genotype-phenotype association curation of disease genes and genotypes Human, Fruitfly, Zebrafish Methodology: Flexible post-coordination of phenotype descriptions using Foundry ontologies Based on ‘PATO’ ontology of qualities E.g. Shortened length of dendrite of columnar neuron
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OBI: Ontology for Biomedical Investigations An integrated ontology for experiments and investigations Reuses terms from OBO Foundry ontologies in a modular way Classes representing experimental artefacts, roles, hypotheses, variables etc Adherence to upper ontology (BFO)
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Results: GO cross-products Ongoing work: Processes and functions with chemical entities as participants E.g. cysteine biosynthesis Processes defined in terms of types of cell E.g. neural crest cell migration Mutual feedback
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Anatomy Ontologies Common Anatomy Reference Ontology Ontologies of gross anatomy have been developed using divergent methodologies CARO was developed after an NCBO sponsored meeting on anatomy ontologies Ontology based on structure of the FMA Common framework and upper-level terms for taxon-specific anatomical ontologies Cell ontology Merge of EVOC and initial OBO Cell ontology
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Finding out more and participating http://obofoundry.org http://obofoundry.org http://www.bioontology.org http://www.bioontology.org obo-discuss@lists.sourceforge.net obo-discuss@lists.sourceforge.net
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Acknowledgements NCBO/Berkeley Nicole Washington Mark Gibson John Day-Richter Suzanna Lewis NCBO/Stanford Nigam Shah Daniel Rubin Archana Verbakam Lynn Murphy Michael J Montague Mark Musen Ontologies Amelia Ireland Jane Lomax Jen Clark Midori Harris David Hill Karen Eilbeck Seth Carbon Judith Blake & GO NCBO/Buffalo Fabian Neuhaus Werner Ceusters Louis Goldberg Barry Smith NCBO/Eugene Melissa Haendel Monte Westerfield NCBO/Cambridge Michael Ashburner George Gkoutos NCBO/Victoria Chris Callender Margaret-Anne Storey NCBO/Mayo James Buntrock Chris Chute NIH Peter Good Carol Bean David Sutherland Oliver Hofmann Sue Rhee Johnathan Bard Lindsay Cowell Erik Segerdell Alan Rector Cynthia Smith Jannan Eppig Rex Chisholm Pascale Gaudet Paula de Matos Rafael Alcantra Kirill Degtyarenko Pankaj Jaiswal Onard Mejino Cornelius Rosse William Bug Alan Ruttenberg Trish Whetzel Jennifer Fostel & OBI Consortium NCBO/UCSF Simona Carini Ida Sim Nation Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
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Karen Eilbeck song.sf.net properties and features of nucleic sequences Sequence Ontology (SO) RNA Ontology Consortium (under development) three-dimensional RNA structures RNA Ontology (RnaO) Barry Smith, Chris Mungall obo.sf.net/relations hip relations Relation Ontology (RO) Protein Ontology Consortium (under development) protein types and modifications Protein Ontology (PrO) Michael Ashburner, Suzanna Lewis, Georgios Gkoutos obo.sourceforge.net /cgi -bin/ detail.cgi? attribute_and_valu e qualities of biomedical entities Phenotypic Quality Ontology (PaTO) Gene Ontology Consortium www.geneontology.org www.geneontology.org cellular components, molecular functions, biological processes Gene Ontology (GO) FuGO Working Group obi.sf.net design, protocol, data instrumentation, and analysis Functional Genomics Investigation Ontology (FuGO) JLV Mejino Jr., Cornelius Rosse fma.biostr.washingt on. edu structure of the human body Foundational Model of Anatomy (FMA) Melissa Haendel, Terry Hayamizu, Cornelius Rosse, David Sutherland, (under development) anatomical structures in human and model organisms Common Anatomy Refer- ence Ontology (CARO) Paula Dematos, Rafael Alcantara ebi.ac.uk/chebi molecular entities Chemical Entities (ChEBI) Jonathan Bard, Michael Ashburner, Oliver Hofman obo.sourceforge.net /cgi- bin/detail.cgi?cell cell types from prokaryotes to mammals Cell Ontology (CL) Custodians URL Scope Ontology
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