POC Conf. Call 1-3-12
POC meeting, Webex Conference Call; Date: Tuesday Jan 3rd, 2012 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_12-20-11?
Back to POC Meetings Minutes
PSDS Revisions: Whole plant development stages
Updates to GO terms for Dormancy Process terms:
Link to discussion on GO SF Tracker
Most of our suggestions were accepted, except that they did not see the need for "multicellular organism dormancy process". These changes should take effect early in the New Year.
Agreed upon def'ns and comments:
dormancy process (GO:0022611): A developmental process in which dormancy (sometimes called a dormant state) is induced, maintained or broken. Dormancy is a suspension of most physiological activity and growth that can be reactivated.
comment: In plants and animals, dormancy may be a response to environmental conditions such as seasonality or extreme heat, drought, or cold. In plants, dormancy may involve the formation of dormant buds, and may be preceded by the senescence of plant parts such as leaves in woody plants or most of the shoot system [in] herbaceous perennials. The exit from dormancy in vascular plants is marked by resumed growth of buds and/or growth of vascular cambium.
Dbxrefs: GOC:PO_curators [to be added to the curators' initials file]
Paola had a question about the PO_ref: "how should I enter this? I haven't found any other PO_REF in GO or in the GO>references file"
They are willing to add 'multicellular organism dormancy process' as a narrow synonym.
seed dormancy process (new name)(GO:0010162): A developmental process in which dormancy (sometimes called a dormant state) is induced, maintained or broken in a seed. Seed dormancy is a suspension of most physiological activity and growth in a seed, including the embryo contained therein, that can be reactivated. It often requires special conditions for reactivation, such as specific temperature, scarification, or leaching of inhibitors.
comment:?
related synonym: seed dormancy
Dbxrefs as above
RW noted: "You could add an xref: seed dormancy process (GO:0010162) has_participant seed (PO:0009010)
TB:In GO, we do not currently use has_participant outside of the go_xp_chebi.obo file,
New term: bud dormancy process (GO:xxxxxxx): A developmental process in which dormancy (sometimes called a dormant state) is induced, maintained or broken in a bud. Bud dormancy is a suspension of most physiological activity and growth that can be reactivated. It may be a response to environmental conditions such as seasonality or extreme heat, drought, or cold. The exit from bud dormancy is marked by the resumed growth of the bud.
Comment: Bud dormancy may precede dormancy of the whole plant.
Paola: To make it clear that this term refers to plant buds only, and to avoid confusion with other buds i.e. those resulting from asexual reproduction, I'd add a taxon constraint. Plant experts, please advise if this should be to Viridiplantae, Embryophyta or Spermatophyta.
From RW: I think the taxon restriction should be for Embryophyta, but I will check into whether or not the term bud is used for green algae.
RW noted: "You could add an xref: bud dormancy process (GO:0010162 has_participant bud (PO:0000055)."
see comment from TB, above.
(Paola: BTW, to do too: GO:0042751 estivation, add exact synonym: aestivation)
Review of PO terms for gametophyte/sporophyte dormant stage
These were accepted at the POC Conf. Call 12-13-11, but will need to be revised based upon the revisions of the GO terms to complete them. See below:
sporophyte dormant stage (PO:0007132): A sporophyte development stage during which a sporophyte participates in an multicellular organism dormancy process (GO:xxxx).
Revised def'n: sporophyte dormant stage (PO:0007132): A sporophyte development stage during which a sporophyte participates in an dormancy process. [source:GO:0022611]
Revised comment: Dormancy process (GO:0022611)is a suspension of most physiological activity and growth that can be reactivated. 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. Dormancy of a plant may be preceded by the senescence of its parts such as leaves in woody plants or most of the shoot system herbaceous perennials and by the formation of dormant buds. The end of dormancy in a sporophyte is marked by resumed growth of buds and/or growth of vascular cambium. The dormant stage may be a response to environmental conditions such as seasonality or extreme heat, drought, or cold. Resurrection plants are in andormant stage when they become dessicated.
take off: 'Refers to GO0022611 (dormancy process). Have requested term for multicellular organism dormancy in GO.'
gametophyte dormant stage (PO:0025342): A gametophyte development stage during which a gametophyte participates in a organism dormancy process (GO:xxxx). link to dev
Revised def'n: gametophyte dormant stage (PO:0025342): A gametophyte development stage during which a gametophyte participates in a dormancy process. [source:GO:0022611]
Revised comment: Dormancy process (GO:0022611) is a suspension of most physiological activity and growth that can be reactivated. This term only applies to a whole plant in the gametophyte stage, not to the dormant stage of other plant structures. The dormant stage may be a response to environmental conditions such as seasonality or extreme heat, drought, or cold. Examples of a gametophyte dormant stage are a moss that has undergone dessication (a resurrection plant) or the female gametophyte of Ginkgo biloba, which is dormant before fertilization.
remove: Refers to GO0022611 (dormancy process). Have requested term for multicellular organism dormancy in GO.
Note: Need to check on details of Ginkgo,
Resolving the issue about the existing synonyms of sporophyte dormant stage
Are these actually appropriate as synonyms for sporophyte dormant stage (PO:0007132, was dormancy, which was a subtype of whole plant growth stage)?
10.05-seed dormant in barley
10.05-seed dormant in oat
10.05-seed dormant in Triticeae
10.05-seed dormant in wheat
10.06-viable seed germination in barley
10.06-viable seed germination in oat
10.06-viable seed germination in Triticeae
10.06-viable seed germination in wheat
10.07-seed not dormant in barley
10.07-seed not dormant in oat
10.07-seed not dormant in Triticeae
10.07-seed not dormant in wheat
They all come from GRO.
Seems like they should be synonyms of seed dormant stage, but we do not have a term for that, which is why they probably got stuck here.
Need new PSDS term:
seed dormant stage(PO:000xxxx): A sporophyte vegetative development stage that occurs during the interval between the first division of the zygote and onset of the seed germination stage (PO:0007057), during which a seed participates in a seed dormancy process. [source:GO:0010162].
These synonyms should be moved here (or gotten rid of):
10.05-seed dormant in barley
10.05-seed dormant in oat
10.05-seed dormant in Triticeae
10.05-seed dormant in wheat
Existing term: seed germination stage (PO:0007057): The resumption of growth by the embryo in a seed. [source: GR:Anuradha_Pujar, ISBN:047124529]
related synonyms: germination in maize
0 germination in Solanaceae
0 Germination in soybean
00-germination in maize
01-germination in barley
01-germination in oat
01-germination in rice
01-germination in Triticeae
01-germination in wheat
BBCH principal growth stage 0
germination in Arabidopsis
maize growth stage-0
rice growth stage-1
Could also move these synonyms there:
10.06-viable seed germination in barley
10.06-viable seed germination in oat
10.06-viable seed germination in Triticeae
10.06-viable seed germination in wheat
10.07-seed not dormant in barley ??
10.07-seed not dormant in oat ??
10.07-seed not dormant in Triticeae ??
10.07-seed not dormant in wheat ??
gametophyte/sporophyte senescent stage terms
See initial discussion at Saturday_Sept_10th,_2011#Task_4._Work_existing_upper-_to_mid-level_terms_into_the_hierarchy_determined_in_task_3., where we decided that even though a plant may die from other causes before the end of normal senescence, the senescent stage of a whole plant ends with death.
Even though the existing GO terms are not perfect for our needs, we will go ahead with the new definitions, and add a comment that we have requested new definitions from GO, which we can get rid after GO updates their definitions.
sporophyte senescent stage (PO:0007017): A sporophyte development stage during which a sporophyte participates in multicellular organism senescence (GO:0010259).
comment: The sporophyte senescent stage is often preceded by the sporophyte reproductive stage, and it ends with death of the sporophyte, either as a result of senescence or some other cause. The sporophyte senescent stage always succeeds the sporophyte reproductive stage in monocarpic plants. This stage is distinct from sporophyte dormant stage (PO:0007132), in which many organs senesce, but some parts of the plant remain alive. Multicellular organism senescence/aging includes loss of functions such as resistance to disease, homeostasis, and fertility, as well processes like cellular senescence, organ senescence, and wear and tear.
Suggest adding to comment of sporophyte reproductive stage: The sporophyte senescent stage always succeeds the sporophyte reproductive stage in monocarpic plants.
gametophyte senescent stage (PO:0025343): A gametophyte development stage during which a gametophyte participates in multicellular organism senescence (GO:0010259).
comment: The gametophyte senescent stage is often preceded by the gametophyte reproductive stage, and it ends with death of the gametophyte, either as a result of senescence or some other cause. This stage is distinct from gametophyte dormant stage (PO:0007132), in which many organs senesce, but some parts of the plant remain alive. Multicellular organism senescence/aging includes loss of functions such as resistance to disease, homeostasis, and fertility, as well processes like cellular senescence, organ senescence, and wear and tear.
Senescence and aging in GO
This section was copied from POC 12-20-11 and needs to be revised
Put in the link to GO SourceForge tracker:
PO has the following terms: sporophyte senescent stage (PO:0007017), gametophyte senescent stage (PO:0025343), H anther senescence (PO:0001036), and 4 leaf senescence stage (PO:0001054), plus 6 ripening (PO:0007010). Rather than writing out the definition senescence in every term, we would like to be able to refer to a GO biological process term.
Go had the general term:
senescence GO:0010149: OBSOLETE. A preprogrammed process associated with the dismantling of an anatomical structure and an overall decline in metabolism. This may include the breakdown of organelles, membranes and other cellular components. An example of this process is found in Arabidopsis thaliana, when older leaves or floral organs are shed.
but, as their comment says: "This term was made obsolete because its name is ambiguous and it is covered by the two more specific terms: 'organ senescence ; GO:0010260' and 'cell aging ; GO:0007569'."
The POC needs a term for whole organism senescence, and we feel that the existing definitions of aging is not appropriate for plants, or even for GO:cell aging and GO:cellular senescence.
Revisions to existing GO terms:
GO tree view:
aging
>cell aging
>>cellular senescence
>multicellular organismal aging
>organ senescence
>>leaf senescence
See References/notes, below, for source of definitions.
aging (GO:0007568)
current definition: The inherent decline over time, from the optimal fertility and viability of early maturity, that may precede death and may be preceded by other indications, such as sterility.
proposed definition: A developmental process that is a deterioration and loss of function over time.
Comment: Aging includes loss of functions such as resistance to disease, homeostasis, and fertility, as well as wear and tear. Aging includes cellular senescence, but is more inclusive. May precede death (GO:0016265) and may succeed developmental maturation (GO:0021700).
Note: GO:biological process already states that this applies is "pertinent to the functioning of integrated living units: cells, tissues, organs, and organisms", and GO:developmental process states that it is a "progression of an integrated living unit... over time from an initial condition to a later condition".
At least week's call, we agreed that comment about sterility should probably come out. GO has a term for aging-dependend sterility, synonym of chromatin silencing at silent mating-type cassette.
CM: General comment on structure: This depends on repetition of a common process that is repeated in child terms. Puts a lot of weight on the definition of the parent term. There are other kinds off deterioration and loss of functions that are not aging (RW: but are there other kinds of developmental processes that are deterioration and loss of functions?). Maybe aging should be a kind of grab bag for cellular aging, organ aging, and organism aging, and make more specific definitions for those. Onotology structure would be identical, but would affect definitions.
Some discussion of the difference between aging and getting older. Does aging always follow maturity?
cell aging (GO:0007569)
current definition: Progression of the cell from its inception to the end of its lifespan. Source: GOC:jh, PMID:12044934
proposed definition: An aging process that has as participant a cell after a cell has stopped dividing.
Comment: Precedes cell death (GO:0008219) and may succeed cell maturation (GO:0048469). Cell aging includes cellular senescence, but is more inclusive.
cellular senescence (GO:0090398)
current definition: A cell aging process stimulated in response to cellular stress, whereby normal cells lose the ability to divide through irreversible cell cycle arrest. Source: GOC:BHF
proposed definition: A cellular aging process in which a cell permanently loses the ability to participate in the cell cycle (GO:0007049).
Comment: Cellular senescence may be accompanied by other cell aging processes, such as wear and tear or the dismantling of cellular components. May be a response to cellular stress or other stimuli, whereby normal cells lose the ability to divide through irreversible cell cycle arrest (post-mitotic senescence), or it may be intrinsic, in cells that have a finite capacity for division (mitotic senescence).
We may want to make two new subtypes, mitotic cellular senescence and post-mitotic cellular senescence.
Go has terms for quiescence (GO:0070314 and GO:0070317) and cell cycle arrest (GO:0007050). The definitions of cell cycle arrest is quite general, and could include cellular senescence. We need to make GO aware of this.
Comment from DWS outside meeting: Cells can stop dividing and be specialized, then dedifferentiate and start to divide again (totipotency). From RW: In this case, the cell has not lost its capacity to divide, so it is not going through senescence. However, it may not always be able to tell if a cell is quiescent of senescent.
multicellular organismal aging (GO:0010259):
current definition: The inherent decline of a multicellular organism over time, from the optimal fertility and viability of early maturity, that may precede death and may be preceded by other indications, such as sterility. Source: GOC:dph, GOC:isa_complete, GOC:mtg_sensu, GOC:sm
proposed definition: An aging process that has as participant a whole multicellular organism.
Comment: Multicellular organism aging includes loss of functions such as resistance to disease, homeostasis, and fertility, as well as wear and tear. Multicellular organisms aging includes processes like cellular senescence and organ senescence, but is more inclusive. May precede death (GO:0016265) of an organism and may succeed developmental maturation (GO:0021700).
Synonym: multicellular organism senescence; we may want to add monocarpic senescence as a narrow synonym or as a new subtype (see notes below).
BS: We need to make note of terms like monocarpic that should be defined in other ontologies. CM suggested that it could go in PATO.
organ senescence (GO:0010260)
current definition: The process that occurs in an organ near the end of its active life that is associated with the dismantling of cell components and membranes, and an overall decline in metabolism. An example of this process is found in Arabidopsis thaliana. Source: GOC:mtg_sensu, GOC:sm
proposed definition: An aging process that has as participant an organ.
Comment: May succeed organ maturation (GO:0048799) and precede the death of the organ. Includes processes such as cellular senescence (GO:0090398) and an overall decline in metabolism (GO:0008152). Occurs in plant organs such as leaves or petals.
Is there organ senescence in animals? Perhaps in things that metamorphosize.
PO will also need a term for anther senescence, is_a organ senescence, to correspond to the PO stage term.
leaf senescence (GO:0010150)
current definition: The process that occurs in a leaf near the end of its active life that is associated with the dismantling of cell components and membranes, loss of functional chloroplasts, and an overall decline in metabolism. Source: ISBN:0387987819
proposed definition: An organ senescence that has as participant a leaf.
Comment: Has as participant a leaf (PO:0025034), or, more specifically, a vascular leaf (PO:0009025) or non-vascular leaf (PO:0025075). May succeed maturation and precede death of the leaf. Includes processes such as cellular senescence (GO:0090398) and an overall decline in metabolism (GO:0008152).
Because of the all-some nature of has_paricipant relation, GO would have to say leaf senescence has_participant leaf, but in every individual instance, the relation would be to vascular leaf or non-vascular leaf.
At this point, the call was temporarily interupted by Darth Vader, be we were able to resist the temptation of the dark side.
ripening (GO:0009835)
GO has the term ripening: The series of events causing changes in one or more characteristics of a fruit (color, aroma, flavor, texture, hardness, cell wall structure) to make it more attractive to animals and/or aid in seed dispersal.
Ripening is_a anatomical structure maturation, but it should be an aging, with the synonym fruit senescence.
proposed definition: An aging process that has as participant a fruit.
comment: Ripening causes changes in one or more characteristics of a fruit (color, aroma, flavor, texture, hardness, cell wall structure) and may make it more attractive to animals and aid in seed dispersal.
synonym: fruit senescence
Rename this "fruit ripening" for clarity.
This term already has a taxon restriction on parent (for Angiospermae, presumably).
References/notes
Nooden and Leopold, 1988, Senescence and Aging in Plants:
Senescence and aging are both degenerative processes. Aging is passive and senescence is active.
Aging: wear and tear
Senescence: internal dismantling of cells, tissues, and organs
Gan, 2010, in Senescence Processes in Plants (Annual Plant Reviews):
ISBN:9781405139847
When cells lose the ability to divide further (either intrinsically or through stress), they begin to age and degenerate. This process is called "cellular aging", "postmitotic aging", or "postmitotic senescence". In plants, postmitotic senescence occurs in leaves/flowers/fruits and involves active but slow degenerative processes, or may be a hypersensitive response, involving an active and very quick degenerative process.
Two types of senescence (for cells or organs):
mitotic senescence: When cells that could divide a finite number of time stop dividing, e.g., arrest of apical meristem or arrest of cell divisions early in fruit development. Also called proliferative senescence. Similar to replicative senescence in yeast and animals.
post-mitotic senescence: Occurs in (cells in) organs like leaves and petals that, once formed, rarely undergo cell division, although the cells retain the ability to divide. Usually involves predominantly somatic tissue, and is similar to cellular senescence in Drosophila and C. elegans
Organism aging or organism senescence: "At the organismal level, when an organism's ability to respond to stress declines, its homeostasis becomes increasingly imbalnaced, and its risk of disease increase with age, which lead to the ultimate death of the whole organism. Although cellular senescence may contribute to organismal senescence, the latter is much more inclusive."
Term Requests from Agron-Omics
At the recent EBI Crop Ontology meeting PJ met with Sean Walsh
Arabidopsis GROwth Network integrating OMICS technologies
put in details here...
Mistake in the CL/PO coordination
CM raised the issue below: spot the inconsistency:
/ PO:0025131 ! plant anatomical entity is_a PO:0009011 ! plant structure is_a PO:0000004 ! in vitro plant structure is_a PO:0000005 ! cultured plant cell *** is_a PO:0009002 ! plant cell [xref: GO:0005623] is_a PO:0000005 ! cultured plant cell ***
/ CL:0000000 ! cell [xref: FMA:68646] [xref: GO:0005623 "cell"] [xref: KUPO:0000002] [xref: WBbt:0004017] [xref: XAO:0003012]
is_a CL:0000003 ! cell in vivo is_a CL:0000004 ! cell by organism is_a CL:0000255 ! eukaryotic cell is_a CL:0000610 ! plant cell *** [xref: PO:0009002]
if the xrefs are equivalent and in vivo is (presumably) disjoint from in vitro, then plant cell is unsatisfiable.
Link to CL:0000610 plant cell on CL.
They should be using our definition of plant cell as well: "A cell which is a plant structure. [source: GO:0005623, POC:Curators]"
- SOLUTION 1:
With it's current placement, CL:0000610 must really be equivalent to a PO:0009002 that is in-vivo - this doesn't correspond to a named class in PO. We could rename CL:0000610 to "in vivo plant cell" and have a bridging axioms that says this is a subclass of PO:0009002
- SOLUTION 2:
obsolete CL:0000610, with a consider link (not replaced by) to PO:0009002
add an xref to PO:0009002 to CL:0000000 (just as we have for the other taxon-centric AOs).
Remove: 'treat-xrefs-as-equivalent: PO'
Add: 'treat-xref-as-genus-differentia: PO part_of NCBITaxon:nnnnn ! viridiplantae'
- SOLUTION 3:
move CL:0000610 ! plant cell to be a direct child of CL:0000000 ! cell
we would probably want to move CL:0000255 ! eukaryotic cell at the same time
From CM:
"I don't like solution 1. Neutral w.r.t. 2 and 3."
"Note that whatever the solution, we need a consistent cross-ontology naming strategy. I don't think it's necessary to prefix every in-vivo class with "in-vivo". But we need to be consistent. At the moment "eukaryotic cell" means "eukaryotic in vivo cell", whereas "plant cell" (in PO) means "plant cell, in vivo or in-vitro".
"How about this: if we have a taxonomic qualification, it doesn't imply in-vivo. If we have a named cell type (e.g. "neuron") or some other qualification, it implies in-vivo?"
CL should us the PO definition of plant cell. We should put it on the CL plant tracker.
The problem is if someone tries to import PO into CL, because of the conflict with in vivo cell. This should be address in the document from MH proposing changes to CL.
PJ raised an issue with experimentally modified cell -- you can experimentally modify a cell then stick it back in an organism, so it is in vivo.
Not everyone received Melissa's document. RW will circulate to PO internal, and we will review it before we discuss this more.
Wood Anatomy Ontology Meeting
Please see the Wood_Anatomy and the Wood anatomy ontology meeting, 2012 at NYBG, agenda wiki pages for more information.
Tentative dates are Feb. 5th-7th, 2012 (Sun-Tues)
Update and status:
Invitation letter went out 12/15/11 from DWS, to experts (below) signed by all three Co-PIs, along with Jill Wegrzyn of the TreeGenes Database at UCDavis (Bioinformatics) and Andrew Groover Geneticist, USDA Forest Service, Institute of Forest Genetics, Davis CA. Deadline for their response was Dec 31st 2011.
- Frederic Lens: Netherlands Centre for Biodiversity Naturalis
- Barb Lachenbruch link
- Elisabeth Wheeler (paleobotanist and wood anatomist at NC State
- Rachel Spicer Connecticut College
- John Carlson (jec16@psu.edu) link
- Meg (Margeret) Staton (mestato@yahoo.com) Clemson University (the lead on both the hardwoods website and the Fagaceae Genomics Web
So far, Fredich Lens, Meg Staton, Barb Lachenbruch, Elizabeth Wheeler and Rachel Spicer have responded positively, and RW has followed up with them. John Carlson has declined to attend as he is having surgery at the end of January.
Travel authorization forms have been sent to all to confirmed domestic invitees and LC is collecting them. So far we have received them from Jill, EW and Andrew.
The paperwork for FL has been submitted to the dept and is in progress.
BS is available to give his presentation on Sunday morning (see: Wood anatomy ontology meeting, 2012 at NYBG, agenda). He suggested that this presentation may be of interest to others in the NYC area. He will advertise it to a wider audience, and RW will advertise it on the NYBG list. If we need a bigger room, we can get a classroom. DWS (after meeting) said that it would be okay to invite other people.
Upcoming meetings and Presentations 2011/2012:
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).
- We will also do a computer demo Monday 12:50 pm for the PO.
- The PO will also take part in an Outreach booth organized by MaizeGDB- schedule TBA
-Do we want to host the wiki page for the booth again?
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.
Any news??
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
• Abstract was submitted December 9, 2011 for consideration for a talk (or else a poster). MS was co-author.
See link: File:Abs Biocuration 2012 (LC 12-9-11).pdf
• Notification date: February 3, 2012
From 9-27-11: PJ is planning to attend and will be running a biocuration workshop- is this happening?
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.
ASPB Plant Biology 2012
July 20 - 24, 2012 - Plant Biology 2012, Austin, TX
Registration scheduled to open first week in January.
Early Bird Registration: by May 11
Advance Discounted: May 12-June 15
ICBO 2012
International Conference on Biomedical Ontologies (ICBO 2012), July 22nd-25th, Graz, Austria
co-located with the 7th International Conference on Formal Ontologies in Information Systems (FOIS 2012)
Relevant dates
- Jan. 31st, 2012: Paper submission deadline
- Feb. 28th, 2012: Notification of paper acceptance
- March 15th, 2012: Poster, early career symposium, software demonstrations and workshop papers submission deadline
- April 15th, 2012: Notification of poster, early career symposium, software demonstrations and workshop paper acceptance
- June 30th 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.
BS will be organizing an OBO Foundry meeting the afternoon of the day before the conference starts