POC Conf. Call 12-13-11
POC meeting, Webex Conference Call; Date: Tuesday Dec 13th, 2011 10am (PST)
In attendance:
POC members:
Absent:
Collaborators: none
Any changes or corrections (additions/deletions, etc) needed in the minutes from the POC_Conf._Call_12-6-11?
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PDSO Revisions: Whole plant development stages
gametophyte/sporophyte dormant stage
GO terms
GO has terms for dormancy process and seed dormancy, but no term for whole organism dormancy.
dormancy process (GO:0022611): The process in which a dormant state is induced, maintained or broken. Dormancy is characterized by a suspension of physiological activity. (They also have a term for seed dormancy.)
proposed new definition for dormancy process: A developmental process in which a dormant state is induced, maintained or broken.
Comment: A dormant state is characterized by a suspension of most physiological activity, and in plants, a suspension of growth.
seed dormancy (GO:0010162): The process in which a dormant state is induced, maintained and broken in a seed. Dormancy is characterized by a suspension of physiological activity that can be reactivated.
proposed new definition for seed dormancy: A dormancy process that has as participant a seed.
comment: Seed dormancy is characterized by a suspension of physiological activity that can be reactivated. Often requires special conditions for reactivation such as specific temperature, scarification, or leeching of inhibitors.
organism dormancy (new term): A dormancy process that has as participant a whole organism.
Comment: A dormant state in an organism is characterized by a suspension of most physiological activity. In plants, organism dormancy is marked by a suspension of growth and generally involves the formation of dormant buds. These may be above ground (in woody plants), at ground level (in herbaceous plants), or underground (in plants with tubers, bulbs, corms, or perennating rhizomes). Organism dormancy in plants may be preceded by the senescence of other plant parts such as leaves in woody plants or most of the shoot system herbaceous perennials. The end of organism dormancy in vascular plants is marked by resumed growth of buds and/or growth of vascular cambium. Organism dormancy in plants is generally an evolved response to environmental conditions such as seasonality or extreme heat, drought, or cold, although environmental stimuli may not be necessary for the onset of dormancy.
PO terms
sporophyte dormant stage (PO:0007132): A sporophyte development stage during which a sporophyte participates in an organism dormancy process (GO:xxxx).
comment: This term only applies to a whole plant in the sporophyte stage, not to the dormant stage of a seed, bud, or other plant structure, although a sporophyte dormant stage involves the formation of dormant buds. These may be above ground (in woody plants), at ground level (in herbaceous plants), or underground (in plants with tubers, bulbs, corms, or perennating rhizomes). Dormancy may be preceded by the senescence of other plant parts such as leaves in woody plants or most of the shoot system herbaceous perennials. The end of dormancy is marked by resumed growth of buds and/or growth of vascular cambium. The dormant stage is generally an evolved response to environmental conditions such as seasonality or extreme heat, drought, or cold, even though environmental stimuli may not be necessary for the onset of dormancy.
gametophyte dormant stage (PO:0025342): A gametophyte development stage during which a gametophyte participates in a dormancy process (GO:0022611).
comment: This term only applies to a whole plant in the gametophyte stage, not to the dormant stage of other plant structures. The dormant stage is generally an evolved response to environmental conditions such as seasonality or extreme heat, drought, or cold, even though environmental stimuli may not be necessary for the onset of dormancy.
References:
Vegis; Dormancy in Higher Plants ARPP 1964
paper on sporophyte dormancy in a bryophyte
Dormancy of gemmae in a liverwort: DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0706.2001.940314.x. In this case, the gemma is a whole plant.
Dessication tolerance in resurrection plants: DOI: 10.1080/07352680591008583. A kind of dormancy?
review of definitions for embryo stage and plant embryo
embryo stage
We already had a term PO:0007631, embryo development stages, is_a seed development stage. This term was renamed embryo stage and made is_a sporophyte vegetative stage.
proposed def.:
embryo stage (PO:0007631): A sporophyte vegetative stage that occurs during the interval between the first cell division and one of the following: germination in seed plants, formation of the first true leaf after the cotyledon(s) in pteridophytes, cessation of division of the apical cell and initiation of development of the sporangium in bryophytes, or the beginning of the formation of organs (roots, shoot axes, or leaves) in cultured plant embryos.
Comment: The embryo stage generally starts after the first division of a zygote, but in the case of adventitious embryos, somatic embryos, other embryos that arise through apogamy, and cultured haploid embryos, it begins after the division of a single cell that is not a zygote. The end of the embryo stage varies among taxa.
plant embryo
Now that we have a working term for embryo stage, we can define plant embryo in terms of the stage.
existing def. plant embryo (PO:0009009): A whole plant in the early part of a sporophytic phase after the first cell division.
proposed def. plant embryo (PO:0009009): A whole plant that participates in the embryo stage (PO:0025369).
comment (basically the same as existing comment): An embryo is generally formed after the first division of a zygote, but in the case of adventitious embryos, somatic embryos, other embryos that arise through apogamy, and cultured haploid embryos, it is formed after the division of a single cell that is not a zygote. The end of the embryo stage varies among taxa. In seed plants, the embryo stage ends with germination. In pteridophytes, the embryo stage ends with the formation of the first true leaf after the cotyledon(s). In bryophytes, the embryo stage ends when the apical cell stops dividing and the sporangium begins to develop. In cultured plant embryos, the embryo stage ends when organs (roots, shoot axes, or leaves) begin to form.
-change from participates_in sporophyte development stage to participates_in embryo stage
We had a discussion a few weeks ago whether is better to define stages in terms of structures in terms of stages. In general, it is better to define stages in terms of structures. This works well for terms like trichome development stage. However, in the case of embryo stage, the structure is really a whole plant that is undergoing certain processes, and the stage is a more fundamental term.
zygote stage
We already have a term "A zygotic stage" (PO:0001097), is_a embryo stage. This was renamed zygote stage and made is_a sporophyte development stage.
proposed def. zygote stage (PO:0001097):A sporophyte development stage that occurs during the interval between syngamy and the first cell division.
As with the embryo stage/embry, RW thinks it would be better to define the stage, then define a zygote as a whole plant that participates the zygote stage, rather than the other way around.
Upcoming meetings and Presentations 2011/2012:
Sematic web conference focused on life science
JP will attend the SWAT4LS meeting in December. Folks such as TW from NCBO will be there.
Poster presentation: "Planteome Annotation Wiki: A Semantic Web Application for the Community Curation of Plant Genotypes and Phenotypes link
PAG 2012
January 14-18, 2012, San Diego, California
PO will be represented at the following events:
- Ontology workshop, Saturday January 14th from 10:20am-12:30pm: Use of Ontologies for Organizing Plant and Animal Genomics Data. We have 5 speakers and time at the end for a panel discussion.
PJ will give the introductory remarks at the Ontology workshop, and hopefully take part in the Panel Discussion.
For more info, see the PAG 2012 Ontology workshop wiki page.
- LC is also presenting in the Non-Seed Plant Workshop on Saturday, Jan 14th, (3:50pm-6pm) and in the Plant Phenotypes workshop on Sunday, Jan. 15th, (8:00am - 10:10am).
- LC will also do a computer demo for the PO, unless one of the Justins is there and wants to do it.
- The PO will take part in an Outreach booth organized by MaizeGDB.
Phenotype RCN meeting, 23-25 February 2012
The dates: February 23-25, 2012 (Thursday, Friday, 1/2 Saturday) have been confirmed for the next annual Phenotype RCN meeting.
It will be held again at NESCent (Durham, NC).
RW has a friend there she can stay with and is interested in going.
Maize Genetics Meeting, March 15-18, 2012
The maize meetings are being held in Portland, OR this year.
For more info see: Maize Genetics Meeting 2012
Registration Link: 2012 Maize Genetics Conference Registration Page will open on December 30, 2011.
Deadlines:
Advance meeting registration is due by January 31, 2012.
5th International Biocuration Conference
April 2-4, 2012, Washington DC
Call for abstracts is now open:
There are three submission categories for abstracts:
1. Talk or Poster (with consideration for oral presentation) (LC would prefer a talk)
2. Poster only
3. Workshop only
• Submission deadline December 9, 2011
• Notification of acceptance February 3, 2012
There are seven topic sessions from which submitters are invited to select:
1. Ontologies, standards and best practices, including gold standard datasets.
2. Protein annotation; sequences, structures and pathways.
3. Community annotation and Wikis.
4. Genomics and metagenomics data curation.
5. High throughput proteomics data (focus on NGS and MS data) curation and presentation.
6. Literature collection, text mining and curation.
7. Tools to assist curation, including automated pipelines.
PJ planning to attend and will be running a biocuration workshop, LC and RW can go, DWS will be away,
'From 9-27-11: PJ: we should ask MS, and possibly SR, to contribute to the abstract and the annotation guide.
SPNHC 2012
Annual meeting of the Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections
Yale University, New Haven Connecticut June 11-16, 2012
Any interest in making a PO presentation at this meeting? Perhaps RW and/or DWS could just go for the day of the presentation, since it is local (New Haven, CT).
The theme for the meeting is "Emerging Technology and Innovation in Natural History Collections Management" (focus on the tools, innovative methods and collaborations that will move the natural history collections community forward).
From PJ: If we can show progress in the FNA work or Morphobank yes we should
Botany 2012
July 7 - 11, 2012 - Columbus, Ohio
Call for Symposia, Colloquia and Workshops:
RW, DWS and MAG put together a proposal for a half day hands-on workshop. The goal will be to teach people (mostly botanists) how to access and use the PO, including how to send feedback, suggest new terms, etc.
Proposal was submitted, waiting for news.
PJ: suggest that we go there with a 'draft' version of the Plant Phenotype Ontology and show them how to use these in character matrixes.
exhibitor's booth
We should also consider hosting an outreach booth.
Not a bad deal for non-profits: $500 for A 10 x 10 Booth Space at Botany 2012, and 2 complimentary registrations for the conference. (plus all the extras!)
• 2 months of Rotating Banner Ads in the online American Journal of Botany
• A Rotating Banner Ad in one edition of the online Plant Science Bulletin
• A Rotating Banner Ad on the Botany 2012 abstract submission site
• A Rotating Banner Ad on the 2012 Conference Registration site.
PJ will check with Gramene and Doreen Ware to see if they want to co-host a booth.
Annotation wiki
JP may also give a talk on the new annotation wiki at this meeting, as part of the genomics section.
ICBO 2012
International Conference on Biomedical Ontologies (ICBO 2012)
co-located with the 7th International Conference on Formal Ontologies in Information Systems (FOIS 2012)
22-25 July 2012; Graz, Austria.
Conference Web site: http://purl.bioontology.org/ICBO/
- The consensus with CM, MH and DOS was not to organize an Anatomy Ontology Workshop this year.
BS will be organizing an OBO Foundry meeting the afternoon of the day before the conference starts.
Could also consider organizing a phenotype ontology workshop.
Relevant dates
31 December 2011: Workshop and tutorial proposal submission deadline
25 January 2012: Notification of acceptance of workshops and tutorials
31 January 2012: Paper submission deadline
28 February 2012: Notification of paper acceptance
15 March 2012: Poster, early career symposium, software demonstrations and workshop papers submission deadline
15 April 2012: Notification of poster, early career symposium, software demonstrations and workshop paper acceptance
30 June 2012: Deadline for all camera-ready copies for the proceedings
We have until Jan. 31 to submit a paper. Do we want to try to prepare a manuscript for this?
Possible topics: finding commonality in development stages across the plant kingdom (revisions of PGDSO), plant phenotypes in ontologies, community driven annotation efforts (new application from JP and others), others?
BS would like to collaborate on a preliminary paper on Plant Disease Ontology. RW will review IDO and summarize what is there already for plants, what is needed, how it will link to PO. LC will also collaborate.
ASPB Plant Biology 2012
July 20 - 24, 2012 - Plant Biology 2012, Austin, TX