Difference between revisions of "POC Conf. Call 2-08-11"

From Plant Ontology Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 138: Line 138:
 
Is there a protoderm in non-vascular plants? (def: A portion of meristem tissue that develops from the outer layer of an apical meristem and gives rise to a portion of epidermis.)
 
Is there a protoderm in non-vascular plants? (def: A portion of meristem tissue that develops from the outer layer of an apical meristem and gives rise to a portion of epidermis.)
  
==current is_a children of vascular leaf==
+
===current is_a children of vascular leaf===
  
 
Is there heteroblasty in non-vascular leaves? do these terms apply?
 
Is there heteroblasty in non-vascular leaves? do these terms apply?

Revision as of 21:14, 2 February 2011

POC meeting, Webex Conference Call; Date: Tuesday Feb 8th, 2011 10am (PST)

In attendance:

POC members:

Absent:

Collaborators:


Acceptance of the minutes from the POC_Conf._Call_2-01-11?


Wrapping up the TAIR requests on SF:

Note: new terms requested by TAIR get ID's from the TAIR number space (0000000-0005000)

stomatal meristemoid cell

Changed meristematic cell part_of meristem to meristem has_part meristematic cell.

Merged meristermoid into initial cell. New definition: A meristematic cell that by division gives rise to two cells, one of which remains meristematic, while the other is added to the plant body.

Comment: Initial cells are part of a portion of tissue that is composed mostly of somewhat older, differentiating cells. The division of an initial cell is often uneven, with the smaller daughter cell remaining meristematic.

Added new term stomatal initial: An epidermal initial that undergoes several rounds of uneven division, each time giving rise to a larger daughter cell that differentiates into an epidermal ground cell and a smaller daughter cell that remains meristematic, until the meristematic cell differentiates into a guard mother cell. Synonyms: stomatal initial cell, stomatal meristermoid.

Guard mother cell now develops from stomatal initial, instead of epidermal initial.

ovary septum vs carpel septum

Wrote new definition for parent term septum: A plant structure composed of two or more layers of various tissues that is a partition that divides a cavity formed by the fusion of two or more organs.

Comment: A septum is formed by the fusion of the walls of two adjacent organ parts (ovary walls or anther walls), for example, the partition between two sections of an orange, seen in cross-section.

Images to illustrate septum are on plantsystematic.org, but they are not linked to the key word septum (to locule instead). Will wait to add link until we can properly annotate the image.

Had to be a plant structure, rather than cardinal organ part, because it is composed of parts of two adjacent organs.


The primary name for PO:0005009 was changed from carpel septum to ovary septum, because carpel septum suggests that it is a septum within a carpel, rather than what it is, which is a septum between carpels. Left carpel septum as a related synonym.

Changed from part_of carpel to part_of gynoecium.

Definition: A septum that divides a multilocular ovary. Comment: Found in species with syncarpous gynoecia (fused carpels).

The section below is still under construction.

Need to look at definition of anther septum.

Create new term pseudoseptum? If so, add comments to septa pointing users to pseudoseptum.

dispersed meristematic cell

Decided to add three new terms:

-procambial cell: A meristematic cell that is part of a portion of procambium. part_of procambium

-leaf procambrium: A portion of shoot procambrium tissue that is part of a leaf. part_of leaf

-leaf procambial cell: A procambial cell that is part of a leaf procambium. part_of leaf procabium syn: DMC, dispersed meristematic cell

suggest adding comment: Leaf procambial cells may be derived from the shoot apical meristem or can arise throughout the mesophyll of a developing leaf. (wording?)


Problem that arose during editing:

procambium (PO:0006074) is defined as "A portion of primary cambium that undergoes differentiation to form the primary vascular tissue. is_a cambium, part_of apical meristem," but cambium is defined as a lateral meristem (which procambium isn't) and as part_of apical meristem (which it isn't always -- think of leaves).

Suggest making procambium is_a meristem, similar to protoderm.

Suggested definition for procambium: A portion of meristem tissue that undergoes differentiation to form primary vascular tissue. Comment: May occur in an apical meristem or in a developing phyllome.

It is okay to say that root procambium and shoot axis procambium are part of an apical meristem. Right now, root procambium is part_of root meristem, should be part_of root apical meristem.

Current term shoot procambium (PO:0006306) is vague, because it does not specify shoot system or shoot axis. Changed definition to make it clear it is for a shoot system (any above ground part of plant), then made leaf procambium a child of shoot procambium, and also added new term for shoot axis procambium.

Proposed def. shoot procambium: A portion of procambium tissue that is part of a shoot system.

Proposed def. shoot axis procambium: A portion of shoot procambium that is part of a shoot apical meristem and gives rise to the primary vascular tissue of a shoot axis.


Also found that root initial cell is_a root apical meristem. Changed it to is_a initial cell, part_of root apical meristem.

xylem pole pericycle cell

Added the following terms:

- pericycle cell (PO:0025261): A ground tissue cell that is part of a pericycle.


- xylem pole pericycle cell (PO:0000064): A pericycle cell that is adjacent to a xylem cell.

Comment: Xylem pole pericycle cells may retain some meristematic activity and are the site of lateral root initiation. ref: PMID: 17993548


- phloem pole pericycle cell (PO:0000065): A pericycle cell that is adjacent to a phloem cell.

Comment: Phloem pole pericycle cells are distinct from xylem pole pericycle cells in that they display cytoplasmic characteristics of a more differentiated status. ref: PMID: 17993548

Restructuring descendants of leaf (PO:0025034)

-Some of the part_of children of vascular leaf can also be part of non-vascular leaf. This needs to be done before we can add terms for bryophytes.

-Need to double check the is_a children of leaf.

current is_a children of leaf

  • non-vascular leaf - ok as is
  • vascular leaf - ok as is

Suggest making prophyll a child of vascular leaf.

Suggest making scale leaf is_a leaf (because the term could be used to refer to non-vascular leaves, even though it is usually used for vascular leaves.

  • Suggest adding frond and needle as exact synonyms of vascular leaf

current part_of children of leaf

  • leaf apex - ok as is - applies to both vascular and non-vascular leaf
  • leaf base - ok as is - applies to both vascular and non-vascular leaf
  • leaf endodermis -- Is there ever an endodermis in non-vascular leaves? If not, this should be part_of vascular leaf. Physco group requested the term leaf endodermis. Wrote to them to ask if they really want this term.
  • leaf epidermis - The term may be used for non-vascular leaves, even though many are only one cell thick.

Need to consider definition of epidermis. Does it work to bryophytes?

Def: A portion of plant tissue composed of epidermal cells that develops from the protoderm and covers the surface of a plant structure. [source: POC:curators].

Comment: The epidermis can be composed of one or more layers of cells. In some species, the epidermis is replaced by periderm. Epidermis can also include trichomes and stomatal pores (add root hairs and rhizoids too).

Is there a protoderm in non-vascular plants? (def: A portion of meristem tissue that develops from the outer layer of an apical meristem and gives rise to a portion of epidermis.)

current is_a children of vascular leaf

Is there heteroblasty in non-vascular leaves? do these terms apply?

  • juvenile leaf
  • transition leaf
  • adult leaf

Physco group has included these terms in their ontology, so they want to use them. In that case, either need to make them children of leaf instead of vascular leaf, or add separate terms for vascular and non-vascular juvenile, transition and adult leaves.


Do we want to keep these (as phenotype terms)? At one point we discussed getting rid of them?

  • simple leaf
  • compound leaf


Terms that are probably okay:

  • rosette leaf - probably ok - Are there ever rosette's in bryophytes?
  • cauline leaf - probably ok
  • cotyledon - ok
  • leaf spine - ok
  • cigar leaf - ok

current part_of children of vascular leaf

Terms that are probably okay (only occur in vascular leaves):

  • auricle - ok
  • bundle sheath - ok
  • leaf abscission zone - ok
  • leaf collar - ok
  • leaf vascular system - ok
  • ligule - ok
  • petiole - ok
  • stipule - ok
  • leaf intercalary meristem - probably ok - does it ever occur in non-vascular leaves?
  • leaf sheath - probably ok - does it ever occur in non-vascular leaves?


(see part_of children of leaf)

Terms I'm not sure about:

  • leaf aerenchyma- is there ever aerenchyma in non-vascular leaves?
  • leaf mesophyll - should probably be part of leaf. Is there a mesophyll in non-vascular leaves?


Terms that should be part of leaf:

  • leaf lamina - should be part_of leaf
  • leaf margin - should be part_of leaf

Physcomitrella terms:

-This was identified as a priority, since if we can get their terms in by the next release, they will use PO instead of creating their own ontology.

They have requested about 65 PSO terms. About 15 of those already exist or are trival to add (e.g. non-vascular leaf base, non-vascular leaf apex). Many of the terms will be fairly straight-forward to add, but some will require discussion.

They have requested about about 35 PGDSO terms. About 10 of those already exist. The others should be fairly easy to add once the PGDSO is restructured.


See Terms requested by Physco group for a list of terms. RW is working on a spread-sheet with definitions and parents.


Do we want to give Physco terms their own number space? Maybe a subset of the NYBG number space.

Update on Progress of Publications

Possible target journals for a short paper: PO_Paper_Winter_2011

  • Paper for ICBO meeting- suggestion from BS, ICBO call for papers, deadline is March 1st. could be expanded for submission to journal later


  • Bioinformatics see: Author info, possibly an 'Application Notes' (up to 2 pages; this is approx. 1300 words or 1000 words plus one figure)?



  • Database: We aren't strictly a database, but still think this journal could be a decent fit



  • Short topics paper for American Journal of Botany?

While we were at PAG, DWS mentioned the editor of AJB wants him to put together a short paper for them- maybe can focus on PO?


Target journal for a major, more detailed paper:

-Plant Physiology: RW and LC are working on an outline for a manuscript to submit to Plant Physiology. This will be a more detailed description of the changes made to the PO in the past year, including restructuring of PSO and PGDSO. Will focus on how PO is now applicable to a wider range of plant species. Plant_Physiology_paper-_2011

Upcoming meetings 2011:

  • Phenotype Ontology RCN Summit

The Phenotype Ontology RCN

February 25-27, 2010 at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center in Durham, NC,

Laurel and Pankaj will be attending.

From RW: -What is official PO strategy for dealing with phenotypes?

-Should it differ between description of mutant phenotypes and descriptions needed for systematic studies?

-Should PO develop a list of terms to be submitted to PATO (rather than our current piecemeal suggestions)?

-Possible case study: description of inflorescence types.


* ICBO 2011 Second International Conference on Biomedical Ontology July 26-30, 2011 Buffalo, New York

ICBO

CALL FOR WORKSHOP AND TUTORIAL PROPOSALS: The deadline for workshop and tutorial proposals for the ICBO conference is February 1, 2011

- We decided we are too shorthanded to put togehter a PO workshop, but Melissa, Alan and Chris are organizing an anatomy ontology workshop.

- LC will attend and represent the PO. Invite other plant people?

-BS suggested we might want to submit a short paper which could be published in longer form later


* International Botanical Congress (IBC2011)

July 23rd-30th 2011, Melbourne, Australia

Registration is open Important dates

Dennis and Alejandra are planning to attend IBC2011 and speak in other symposia.

Symposium proposal was accepted, 'Bio-Ontologies for the Plant Sciences' under the genetics, genomics and bioinformatics theme.

See IBC 2011 Bio-Ontologies Symposium wiki page

Pankaj will give the introductory talk on general use of ontologies, GO, genomics, etc, and Ramona will present the talk on the Plant Ontology. Abstracts have been submitted.

No additional abstracts were submitted for our proposal, and Angelica does not think she will be able to attend because of lack of funds.

Dennis will speak in place of Angelica. PJ invited two other speakers. Gavin Kennedy will talk about the ontology application in large scale phenomics projects. Still waiting for abstract from Rudi Appels, who will speak on crop genomics and phenomics.

We received permission to use the 6th time slot for a discussion session. PJ will lead the discussion.

Next meeting scheduled for Tues, Feb. 15th, 2010 at 10am PST