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Gene Ontology annotations and resources.

Gene Ontology Consortium | J A Blake | M Dolan | H Drabkin | D P Hill | Ni Li | D Sitnikov | S Bridges | S Burgess | T Buza | F McCarthy | D Peddinti | L Pillai | S Carbon | H Dietze | A Ireland | S E Lewis | C J Mungall | P Gaudet | R L Chrisholm | P Fey | W A Kibbe | S Basu | D A Siegele | B K McIntosh | D P Renfro | A E Zweifel | J C Hu | N H Brown | S Tweedie | Y Alam-Faruque | R Apweiler | A Auchinchloss | K Axelsen | B Bely | M -C Blatter | C Bonilla | L Bouguerleret | E Boutet | L Breuza | A Bridge | W M Chan | G Chavali | E Coudert | E Dimmer | A Estreicher | L Famiglietti | M Feuermann | A Gos | N Gruaz-Gumowski | R Hieta | C Hinz | C Hulo | R Huntley | J James | F Jungo | G Keller | K Laiho | D Legge | P Lemercier | D Lieberherr | M Magrane | M J Martin | P Masson | P Mutowo-Muellenet | C O'Donovan | I Pedruzzi | K Pichler | D Poggioli | P Porras Millán | S Poux | C Rivoire | B Roechert | T Sawford | M Schneider | A Stutz | S Sundaram | M Tognolli | I Xenarios | R Foulgar | J Lomax | P Roncaglia | V K Khodiyar | R C Lovering | P J Talmud | M Chibucos | M Gwinn Giglio | H -Y Chang | S Hunter | C McAnulla | A Mitchell | A Sangrador | R Stephan | M A Harris | S G Oliver | K Rutherford | V Wood | J Bahler | A Lock | P J Kersey | D M McDowall | D M Staines | M Dwinell | M Shimoyama | S Laulederkind | T Hayman | S -J Wang | V Petri | T Lowry | P D'Eustachio | L Matthews | R Balakrishnan | G Binkley | J M Cherry | M C Costanzo | S S Dwight | S R Engel | D G Fisk | B C Hitz | E L Hong | K Karra | S R Miyasato | R S Nash | J Park | M S Skrzypek | S Weng | E D Wong | T Z Berardini | E Huala | H Mi | P D Thomas | J Chan | R Kishore | P Sternberg | K Van Auken | D Howe | M Westerfield
Nucleic acids research | 2013

The Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium (GOC, http://www.geneontology.org) is a community-based bioinformatics resource that classifies gene product function through the use of structured, controlled vocabularies. Over the past year, the GOC has implemented several processes to increase the quantity, quality and specificity of GO annotations. First, the number of manual, literature-based annotations has grown at an increasing rate. Second, as a result of a new 'phylogenetic annotation' process, manually reviewed, homology-based annotations are becoming available for a broad range of species. Third, the quality of GO annotations has been improved through a streamlined process for, and automated quality checks of, GO annotations deposited by different annotation groups. Fourth, the consistency and correctness of the ontology itself has increased by using automated reasoning tools. Finally, the GO has been expanded not only to cover new areas of biology through focused interaction with experts, but also to capture greater specificity in all areas of the ontology using tools for adding new combinatorial terms. The GOC works closely with other ontology developers to support integrated use of terminologies. The GOC supports its user community through the use of e-mail lists, social media and web-based resources.

Pubmed ID: 23161678 RIS Download

Research resources used in this publication

None found

Antibodies used in this publication

None found

Associated grants

  • Agency: NHGRI NIH HHS, United States
    Id: U41 HG001315
  • Agency: British Heart Foundation, United Kingdom
    Id: RG/13/5/30112
  • Agency: NCATS NIH HHS, United States
    Id: UL1 TR000150
  • Agency: NHLBI NIH HHS, United States
    Id: R01 HL064541
  • Agency: British Heart Foundation, United Kingdom
    Id: SP/07/007/23671
  • Agency: Wellcome Trust, United Kingdom
    Id: 089703
  • Agency: NHGRI NIH HHS, United States
    Id: 1U41HG006104-03
  • Agency: Medical Research Council, United Kingdom
    Id: G1000968
  • Agency: Wellcome Trust, United Kingdom
    Id: 090548
  • Agency: NHGRI NIH HHS, United States
    Id: U41HG002273
  • Agency: NHGRI NIH HHS, United States
    Id: U41 HG002273
  • Agency: Wellcome Trust, United Kingdom
    Id: 092096

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This is a list of tools and resources that we have found mentioned in this publication.


Gene Ontology (tool)

RRID:SCR_002811

Computable knowledge regarding functions of genes and gene products. GO resources include biomedical ontologies that cover molecular domains of all life forms as well as extensive compilations of gene product annotations to these ontologies that provide largely species-neutral, comprehensive statements about what gene products do. Used to standardize representation of gene and gene product attributes across species and databases.

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Neuroscience Information Framework (tool)

RRID:SCR_002894

Framework for identifying, locating, relating, accessing, integrating, and analyzing information from neuroscience research. Users can search for and add neuroscience-related resources at NIF portal and receive and RRID to track and cite resources within scientific manuscripts.

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European Bioinformatics Institute (tool)

RRID:SCR_004727

Non-profit academic organization for research and services in bioinformatics. Provides freely available data from life science experiments, performs basic research in computational biology, and offers user training programme, manages databases of biological data including nucleic acid, protein sequences, and macromolecular structures. Part of EMBL.

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UniProtKB (tool)

RRID:SCR_004426

Central repository for collection of functional information on proteins, with accurate and consistent annotation. In addition to capturing core data mandatory for each UniProtKB entry (mainly, the amino acid sequence, protein name or description, taxonomic data and citation information), as much annotation information as possible is added. This includes widely accepted biological ontologies, classifications and cross-references, and experimental and computational data. The UniProt Knowledgebase consists of two sections, UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot and UniProtKB/TrEMBL. UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot (reviewed) is a high quality manually annotated and non-redundant protein sequence database which brings together experimental results, computed features, and scientific conclusions. UniProtKB/TrEMBL (unreviewed) contains protein sequences associated with computationally generated annotation and large-scale functional characterization that await full manual annotation. Users may browse by taxonomy, keyword, gene ontology, enzyme class or pathway.

View all literature mentions