Gene Ontology
Encyclopedia : G : GE : GEN : Gene Ontology
The Gene Ontology, or GO, project can be broadly split into two parts. The first is the ontology itself, a controlled vocabulary of terms split into three related ontologies covering basic areas of Molecular biology: the molecular function of gene products, their role in multi-step biological processes, and their localization to cellular components. The ontology is continuously updated, and new versions are made available on a monthly basis.
The second part is annotation, the characterization of gene products using terms from the ontology. The members of the GO Consortium submit their data and it is made publicly available through the GO website.
The GO is also part of a larger classification effort, the Open Biomedical Ontologies (OBO).
History
The Gene Ontology was originally constructed in 1998 by a consortium of researchers studying the genome of model organisms such as Drosophila (fruit fly) and Saccharomyces (yeast). Contributions steadily increased with the availability of genome annotation throughout the 1990s, and as of the end of 2005, the GO contains over 19,000 terms applicable to a wide variety of biological organisms. There is a significant body of literature on the development and use of the GO, and it has become a standard tool in the bioinformatics arsenal.Gene Ontology terms
Each GO term consists of a unique alphanumerical identifier, a common name, synonyms (if applicable), and a definition. When a term has multiple meanings depending on species, the GO uses a “sensu” tag to differentiate among them. Terms are classified into only one of the three ontologies, which are each structured as a directed acyclic graph.New terms and annotations are suggested by members of the research and annotation communities. Once submitted, they are reviewed by members of the GO consortium to determine their applicability.
If it is decided that a term in the ontology is not appropriate, it is deprecated, or marked as "obsolete". This can happen for a number of reasons, such as being outside the scope of the ontology or being misleadingly named or defined.
The ontology file is freely available from the [GO website]; the terms can be searched and browsed online using the GO browser [AmiGO]. The Gene Ontology project also provides mappings of its terms to other classification systems covering the same areas of biology.
Gene Ontology Associations
A number of organizations, including model organism databases and large multispecies protein databases, perform analyses of protein sequences and issue tables of associations between putative gene products and GO terms. These are freely available from the GO website and can be downloaded individually or viewed online using [AmiGO].In many older genetic sequence databases, annotations bear little or no indication of their provenance so that a user cannot readily ascertain the nature and strength of the evidence behind them, which leads to what is known in the field as the 'transitive annotation problem.' Some gene is characterized by actual wet-lab experiments, and its sequence deposited in a major public database with annotation from those experiments. Other sequences that have not been characterized in the lab are annotated based on their sequence similarity to this one, and these other sequences in turn form the basis for yet more annotations, and so forth. Thus a user cannot know how many steps of sequence similarity stand between the annotation for some genetic sequence and any actual wet-lab data.
A GO association has metadata indicating:
- Who made the assertion that this GO term applies to the putative product of this protein sequence
- When this assertion was made
- One or more three-letter Evidence code(s) denoting the type of evidence on which this assertion is based.
External links
- [Gene Ontology Consortium] — Provides access to the ontologies, software tools, annotated gene product lists, and reference documents describing the GO and its uses.
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