POC Conf. Call 3-29-11
POC meeting, Webex Conference Call; Date: Tuesday Mar 29th, 2011 10am (PDT)
In attendance:
POC members:
Absent:
Collaborators:
Acceptance of the minutes from the POC_Conf._Call_3-22-11?
Issues arising from last week's meeting:
Cardinal organ parts, continued
Terms requested by MO:
- base
Moss Ontology definition: The sterile bottom of the sporangium. Also called neck or if swollen apophysis or hypophysis. Bill and Nancy Malcolm (2006): Mosses and other Bryophytes, an illustrated glossary, second edition
Proposed name and def.: sporangium base: A cardinal organ part that is the basal part of a sporangium.
Comment: Term used in mosses and other bryophytes (what about pteridophytes?). The sporangium base is the sterile part of the sporangium below the theca. If swollen and distinct from the rest of the sporangium, it is called an apophysis or hypophysis.
part_of sporangium; Synonyms: sporangium neck, apophysis, and hypophysis
- theca
Moss Ontology definition: The main body (urn) of a sporangium. Altered from Bill and Nancy Malcolm (2006): Mosses and other Bryophytes, an illustrated glossary, second edition
We already have the term theca (PO:0009069) to describe paired microsporangia in angiosperms. Maybe we should call that anther theca and call this term sporangium theca:.
Proposed name and def.: sporangium theca: A cardinal organ part that is the main body of a sporangium that contains the spores.
Comment: Term used in mosses and other bryophytes (what about pteridophytes?)
- peristome
Moss Ontology definition: A single or double circle of teeth inside the mouth of a moss sporangium. Bill and Nancy Malcolm (2006): Mosses and other Bryophytes, an illustrated glossary, second edition
proposed definition: A cardinal organ part that is a single or double circle of teeth inside a spore capsule mouth.
Comment: The peristome is located under the operculum, if an operculum is present. Upon maturity of a capsule, the teeth of the peristome open to release the spores.
- peristome tooth
Not requested by Moss Ontology, but should add it.
Proposed def: A cardinal organ part that is a single lobe or tooth of a peristome.
- lid/operculum
Moss Ontology definition: Either the lid that blocks the capsule mouth or the apical portion of a sporangium that opens during dehiscence. Bill and Nancy Malcolm (2006): Mosses and other Bryophytes, an illustrated glossary, second edition.
We also have a request (from PJ) for operculum, which is part of the fruit in Eucalyptus. That term should be named fruit operculum, and this term should be named spore capsule operculum, to distinguish them.
Proposed name and def.: spore capsule operculum: A cardinal organ part that is the apical part of a spore capsule that separates from the rest of the capsule during dehiscence.
Comment: Found in mosses. May remain partly attached to the rest of the capsule.
Also add:
fruit operculum: A cardinal organ part that is the apical part of a capsular fruit that separates from the rest of the capsule (the fruit calyptra) during dehiscence. part_of fruit
Comment: Found in Eucalyptus.
Is is a cardinal organ part (formed from a single carpel) or collective organ part structure (formed from parts of multiple carpels)?
fruit calyptra: A cardinal organ part that is the basal part of a capsular fruit that separates from the fruit operculum during dehiscence. part_of fruit
Comment: Found in Eucalyptus. The capsule may remain attached to the plant after the fruit operculum dehisces.
- spore capsule mouth
Proposed definition: A plant anatomical space that is the opening on the distal end of a spore capsule.
Comment: The mouth is formed when the operculum separates from the capsule. The mouth may be covered by a peristome.
- epiphram
Schofeld says it is a "membranelike expansion of the columella covering most of the mouth of the sporangium in Polytrichidae (hair cap mosses)."
From Crum: "A circular membrane at the tip of the columella to which the peristome teeth of the prolytrichaceae are attached."
Proposed definition: A portion of plant tissue that forms a circular membrane extending from a spore capsule collumella and attached to the ends of the peristome teeth that covers a spore capsule mouth.
Comment: Present in some moss species of the family Polytrichaceae.
What kind of tissue is it?
- pseudopodium
From Crum: "An elongation of the gametophytic axis on which the capsule is borne in Sphagnum and Andreaea."
From Schofeld: "An elongated mass of leafless gaemtophore tissue that pushes the sporophyte beyond the perichaetial leaves (in Andreaea and Sphagnum)."
Proposed definition: An extension of a gametophore axis on which a spore capsule is borne.
Comment: Raises the sporophyte above the perichaetial bracts. Found in Sphagnum and Andreaea.
Plant Tissues
paraphyllium - Tiny filaments, scales or leaf-like structures scattered on the stems of some leafy bryophytes. Bill and Nancy Malcolm (2006): Mosses and other Bryophytes, an illustrated glossary, second edition (MO definition)
Crum defines them as "Small green outgrowths formed between the leaves on stems and branches of some pleurocarps (mosses that produce archegonia and sporophytes laterally, rather than on the tips of their axes) and a very few leafy liverworts."
Schofield describes paraphyllia as outgrowths of the epidermis, but he also describes leaves that way.
MO has this listed as a plant organ
Proposed definition: A phyllome/portion of plant tissue that is a small outgrowth from the epidermis between the leaves of a gametophore axis.
Comment: Paraphyllia are much smaller than leaves and may be filamentous, scale-like, or leaf-like. Found in pleurocarpous mosses and a few leafy liverworts.
The paraphyllia are the small, dark structures between the leaves.
midrib
rhizoid
archesporium
amphithecium
endothecium
jacket layer
paraphysis
axilliary hair
tmema
Plant Cells
Terms requested by MO:
archesporial cell
apical cell
shoot apical cell
phyllid apical cell
alar cell
brachycyte
chloronema cell
caulonema cell
tmema cell
jacket layer cell
axillary hair terminal cell
axillary hair base cell
neck canal cell
side branch initial
Other terms, not requested by MO:
hyrdoid
leptoid
rhizoid initial
Upcoming meetings 2011:
* ICBO 2011 Second International Conference on Biomedical Ontology July 26-30, 2011 Buffalo, New York
LC contributed to the workshop proposal "From Fins to Limbs to Leaves: Facilitating anatomy ontology interoperability" Authors: Melissa Haendel, Chris Mungall, Alan Ruttenberg, David Osumi-Sutherland and Laurel Cooper (Accepted) LC is working with the other organizers to develop the workshop plans and a call for papers.
Full-Day Workshops Schedule:
July 26 9am-6pm The Ontological Representation of Adverse Events: Working with Multiple Biomedical Ontologies
July 27 8.30am-4pm Facilitating Anatomy Ontology Interoperability
July 26 6.30pm-9pm Evening Workshop: Common Logic
July 27 4pm-8pm Evening Workshop: Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Consortium
- LC will attend and represent the PO, will submit a short paper/poster for the workshop (deadline April 1st).
*Plant Biology 2011, Aug 6-10th, Minneapolis, Minn
Early-bird registration ends May 13.
Gramene will be putting together a workshop again, focusing on pathways. PJ will present a PO poster.
Abstract deadlines: Your abstract must be submitted by March 11 if you want it to be considered for a minisymposium talk.
For inclusion on the program memory stick and in the program book, abstracts must be submitted by May 27.
TAIR is organizing an Outreach Booth and we are invited to take part.
* International Botanical Congress (IBC2011)
July 23rd-30th 2011, Melbourne, Australia
Registration is open Important dates
Symposium proposal was accepted, 'Bio-Ontologies for the Plant Sciences' under the Genetics, Genomics and Bioinformatics theme.
Dennis, Alejandra, Pankaj and Ramona are planning to attend.
Early bird registration deadline - Extended 1 March 2011 Deadline for registration by presenters 1 March 2011
See IBC 2011 Bio-Ontologies Symposium wiki page for more details