Synthetic Biology:Semantic web ontology/Examples
From OpenWetWare
Ontology - essentially, a formal description of objects and their interrelationships Described using RDF Schema and/or OWL.
Examples:
- Dublin Core provides a vocabulary to describe bibliographic metadata
- Namespace: http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/
- Properties: title, creator, publisher, identifier
- Gene Ontology provides a controlled vocabulary to describe gene and gene product attributes in any organism. GO terms are organized in directed acyclic graphs (DAGs), which differ from hierarchies in that a 'child' (more specialized term) can have many 'parents' (less specialized terms). GO terms are connected by 'is a' (generalizations) and 'part of' (composition) relationships.
- Namespace: ftp://ftp.geneontology.org/pub/go/xml/dtd/go.dtd
- Properties: name, definition, isa, association, evidence
- Sequence Ontology: features on a nucleotide or protein sequence
- BioPAX: biological pathway data
- UniProt protein sequence and annotation data in RDF format. UniProt OWL Ontology
- SBML uses CellML metadata to describe its elements. See also a message on SBML forum.
- BioModels database and Systems Biology Ontologies (SBO) project
- Open Biomedical Ontologies
- Bio-Ontologies
- Ontologies for molecular biology and bioinformatics
- Microarray Gene Expression Society (MGED) Ontology
- RDF Schemas directory
- CO-ODE ontology examples
- KnowledgeZone - peer reviewed ontology library
Diagram of synthetic biology ontology v0.01 (developed using existing terminology described on the Registry website):
Resources
- GO annotation wiki (from Sri)
- Ontology Development 101: A Guide to Creating Your First Ontology - what is an ontology and why we need it
- Protégé OWL Tutorial (PDF)
- Manchester Pizza Finder
- National Center for Biomedical Ontology