POC Conf. Call 4-17-12
POC meeting, Webex Conference Call; Date: Tuesday Apr 17th, 2012 10am PDT/1pm EDT
In attendance:
POC members:
Absent:
Collaborators: none
Any changes or corrections (additions/deletions, etc) needed in the minutes from the POC_Conf._Call_4-10-12?
Back to POC Meetings Minutes
files on Bioportal
Open items and user requests:
root cambial zone
There are is_a AND part_of relationships between 'root cambial zone' and 'root'.
JE can you make this change without having to reload everything?
ie: remove the is_a relationship between 'root cambial zone' and >'root'
Fixed in dev file?
add top-level plant ontology term
bud areole and lamina areole
At the POC meeting on 11-8-11 we to add a term for areole, refering to a type of bud in cacti. However, this term is also used to refer to a part of a leaf (or other phyllome) lamina. The term for lamina areole was requested by one of our Arabidopsis users (Dora).
Suggest we add a general term for lamina areole, which will cover petals, etc., and a more specific term for leaf lamina areole.
Proposed definition for lamina areole (PO:0025391): A cardinal organ part that is the smallest part of a lamina that is completely surrounded by veins.
Comment: Any order of vein can form the sides of an areole. Taken together, the areoles form a contiguous field of polygons over the area of a lamina. part_of lamina
Proposed definition for leaf lamina areole (PO:0025392): A lamina areole that is the smallest part of a leaf lamina that is completely surrounded by leaf veins.
Comment: Any order of leaf vein can form the sides of an areole. Taken together, the areoles form a contiguous field of polygons over the area of a leaf lamina. Free ending veinlets (PO:0025390) may be found within a leaf lamina areole. part_of leaf lamina
Ref: ISBN:9780801475184
Proposed definition, bud areole (PO:0025353): An axillary bud that does not elongate, in which the leaves develop as spine leaves.
Comment: Found in Cactaceae. Appears as a cluster of spines. May be covered in trichomes. In species with tubercles, the areole is often found at the distal end of the tubercle. The areole originates in the axil of the leaf that becomes the tubercle but is displaced to the tip of a tubercle through adnation (fusion of two organs of different types).
is_a axillary bud
ref.: Bell and Bryan, ISBN:9780881928501
primordium
primordium (PO:0025127), current def.: A portion of plant tissue that differentiates and develops from meristem tissue into a new plant structure. [source: POC:Curators]
Comment: The primordium is the first distinct form in the development of a plant structure.
An issues with this definition came up while we were working on new term requests for Agron-Omics. We felt primordium should probably be an organ, because all primordia have at least two types of tissue - protoderm and ground meristem. Primodia represent plant structures in the earliest stages of development.
There are four types of primordia that are not for organs: flower primordium, ovule primordium, anther primordium and ligule primordium. Therefor, it will be a problem to make primordium is_a plant organ.
For ovule primordium (PO:0000018): We will make ovule a subtype of plant organ, because it fits the definition of plant organ. Will post new proposed definition on SF.
For flower primordium (PO:0004706): We will obsolete this term and replace with "floral organ primordium" (a bin term for petal, sepal, etc. primordium) and add "flower primordium" and "floral primordium" as related synonyms of flower meristem (PO:0000229).
See for example PMID:17272833 and PMID:19717616, two of the PO annotations for flower primordium, which are really referring to floral organ primordia.
There a number of annotations on flower primordium that will have to be moved.
For anther primordium (PO:0009066): Anther is a collective plant structure (4 pollen sacs, which are plant organs). Not much we can do about this.
For ligule primordium (PO:0020105): Ligule is a cardinal organ part ("A membranous or hairy appendage on the adaxial/upper surface of a leaf, at the junction between sheath and blade, especially in grasses." part_of vascular leaf).
Even though we don't have a PO term for it, people also use the term "leaflet primordium", which is also a cardinal organ part. (We have a term for formation of leaflet primordium).
proposed definition, primordium (PO:0025127): A plant organ/plant structure/portion of meristem tissue in an early stage of development after a protoderm has begun to develop and before anatomical structure morphogenisis (GO:0009653).
Comment:
subtypes of primordium
Need a little work too. Will be discussed at future meeting.
Upcoming meetings and Presentations 2012:
Semantics of Biodiversity Workshop
May 16 - 18, 2012
University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute, Lawrence, Kansas
The goals of this workshop (still being refined): 1) Clarification of terms used in the biodiversity, genomics, and ecological communities, and 2) Steps to take in building a Biocollections Ontology.
BS, MAG, and RW are attending.
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
Crop Ontology Workshop
For more information see the wiki page: Crop_Ontology_Workshop_at_OSU,_2012
We are looking at the tentative dates of either: June 11-13th or Aug 6th to 8th
The focus of the workshop will be on mostly development stages and traits for the crop plants
Ruth Bastow is contacting some of the interested people to see which of these dates work best.
Can we consider September? RB is available 12th -25th September
Botany 2012
July 7 - 11, 2012 - Columbus, Ohio
- PO workshop on Sunday, July 8th, 9:00AM - 12:00PM
The meeting web site has been fixed so this is now listed as a half-day (morning) workshop. The schedule now links to the correct abstract.
RW will prepare an announcement for the PO home page and FB page.
Workshop goal will be to teach people (mostly botanists) how to access and use the PO, including how to send feedback, suggest new terms, etc.
PJ: suggest that we go there with a 'draft' version of the Plant Phenotype Ontology and show them how to use these in character matrices.
A desktop version of the image annotation software should be ready to demo at this meeting.
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.
We should do the booth. PJ will attend to host the booth for both Gramene and PO.
Bio-Ontologies SIG 2012
Where: July 13 - 14, 2012, Long Beach, CA. Co-located with ISMB 2012
When: Submissions Due: April 13th, 2012 (Fri)
Three types of submissions.
- Short papers, up to 4 pages. - Poster abstracts, up to 1 page. - Flash updates, up to 1 page
Successful papers will be presented at the Bio-Ontologies SIG.
Poster abstracts: time will be allocated during the 2 days for at least one poster session.
Flash updates are for short talks (5 min) giving the salient new developments on existing public ontologies. Authors of posters can also provide a flash update. Unsuccessful papers will automatically be considered for poster presentation.
ASPB Plant Biology 2012
July 20 - 24, 2012 - Plant Biology 2012, Austin, TX
Link to meeting page: ASPB2012
Abstract was submitted for submission for minisymposia consideration.
Joint workshop is planned with PO, Gramene and TAIR
Registration is open, 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)
RW and BS (with JE, AG, DWS and PJ) submitted a short paper describing a plant disease extension of the Infectious Disease Ontology. This paper was accepted and is being revised. Wiki page for notes on Plant Disease Ontology.
Relevant dates
- Feb. 28th, 2012: Notification of paper acceptance
- April 15th, 2012: Poster, early career symposium, software demonstrations and workshop papers submission deadline
- May 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
RW sent around a draft of an abstract for a poster summarizing the PO-FNA collaboration, with the folks from FNA.
BS will be organizing an OBO Foundry meeting the afternoon of the day before the conference starts
Anatomy Ontology Course at NESCent, July 30th- Aug 3rd, 2012
Link to: Anatomy Ontology course
from Paula Mabee: Opening are available the Anatomy Ontology course.
Link to Course materials
This course aims to teach proper ontology design principles and practices such that anatomical interoperability across evolutionarily disparate taxa is achieved. It further seeks to promote community growth and adoption of ontology-based methods and tools. The subsequent benefit is in the form of shared access to the unique data store of each community (e.g. genetic, genomic, developmental, and evolutionary data).
Apply here: [1]
Application deadline is April 4th, 2012 (extended through mid-April)
LC will forward email to PO announce list and post on PO Facebook page.