Plant Ontology Webinar- May 2011 release

From Plant Ontology Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search

This page is under construction....

Time and Date:

Proposed dates: Monday May 23rd or Tuesday May 24th (preferred)

Time: Possibly at the regular POC Conference call time 10am PDT?

These times work well for the group- will give them a choice of a few times 9am or 10am

Preparing a doodle poll to send out

Goals:

To demonstrate the new plant anatomy terms that have been added to accommodate mosses and give reviewers a brief tutorial on how to use PO.

-To facilitate the review process

People to invite- potential reviewers:

Expertise: Physcomitrella genomics, Moss Ontology

They are interested and available to do it and next Tuesday works for them.

  • Brent Mishler, UC Berkeley, USA, Brent Mishler (bmishler at berkeley.edu)

Expertise: systematics, evolution, and ecology of bryophytes

Expertise: Moss systematics, pleurocarpous mosses, moss structural diversity

  • Barbara Crandall-Stotler, Department of Plant Biology Southern Illinois University Bryophytes at SIU, home (crandall at plant.siu.edu)

Expertise: liverworts, apical growth

  • Bernard Goffinet, University of Connecticut Goffinet Lab (bernard.goffinet at uconn.edu)

Expertise: molecular systematics of bryophytes and lichens

(will present talk on Physco bioinformatics at our symposium at the IBC)

Topics

1. Philosophy behind the organization of the ontology

Ontology structure

Two domains: PGDSO and PAO (focus on PAO)

Top level of PAO: Plant structure, plant anatomical space, portion of plant substance

How terms are organized within the PAO:

(1)by structure, (2) with homology, if it is known

Aim for single inheritance, use multiple if necessary for users


Definitions

Genus-differentia form

-need to read the definition of the ancestor term to understand definition of child term

Relations are a part of the definition

Definitions and names are taxonomy-neutral; should fit any species in which that structure occurs

-comments and subsets help clarify when a term is only used in certain taxa

2. What are the most important changes that had to be made to accommodate mosses and other non-angiosperm plants?

Describing the plant life cycle

The new terms gametophyte phase (PO:0028003) and sporophyte phase (PO:0028002) were added to the PGDSO.

The terms gametophyte and sporophyte were made obsolete, and added as synonyms of whole plant, so, if one wants to describe a gametophyte, they should use whole plant (PO:0000003) in the gametophyte phase (PO:0028003).

Use of the participates_in relation allows us to specify structures that only occur in one generation or the other. For example, seta participates_in sporophyte phase, gametophore participates_in gametophyte phase.


Also added protonema phase, for bryophytes and pteridophytes. Other life cycle/growth phases will be added in future releases.

New mid- to lower-level terms and reorganization to accommodate all plants

  • Added important structures for non-angiosperms that were missing from the PO: sporangium, gametangium, protonema, gametophore, thallus, apical cell, seta
  • Added new terms for structures that only occur in the gametophytic generation: antheridium, archegonium,
  • Redefined mid-level terms to fit broader range of taxa (often had to obsolete and replace, if definition was very different). Example: megagametophyte, microgametophyte, microsporangium,
  • Created general mid-level categories that fit all plants, with specific children for structures that differ among taxa.

Examples:

-sporangium>microsporangium>pollen sac

-apical cell>shoot apical cell>leaf apical cell>non-vascular leaf apical cell

-archesporial cell>male archesporial cell or female archesporial cell

  • Added synonyms that are used for non-angiosperm plants:

Top-level classes were redefined, and new classes were added, to encompass all structures:

Theses changes were important for all plants, not just bryophytes

New upper-level classes:

  • collective plant structure
  • cardinal organ part
  • collective organ part structure
  • embryonic plant structure
  • rhizoid
  • trichome
  • plant anatomical space

Redefined upper-level classes:

  • in vitro plant structure
  • plant cell
  • plant organ
  • portion of plant tissue


Organization: general terms and part_of children

Some classes that occur in both vascular and non-vascular plants (e.g. vascular leaf and non-vascular leaf) have parts that can occur in either type (e.g., leaf epidermis, leaf lamina). Creating separate part_of children for each type would lead to term inflation and an overly complex ontology structure.

Need to talk about parts of leaf, how to annotate to part, plus vascular and non-vascular leaf.

3. Demonstration

4. Q&A