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Standards in Genomic Sciences

  1944-3277

 

 

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Các bài báo tiêu biểu

Complete genome sequence of Halogeometricum borinquense type strain (PR3T)
- 2009
Stephanie Malfatti, Brian J. Tindall, Susanne A. Schneider, Regine Fähnrich, Alla Lapidus, Kurt Labuttii, Alex Copeland, Tijana Glavina del Rio, Matt Nolan, Feng Chen, Susan Lucas, Hope Tice, Jan‐Fang Cheng, David Bruce, Lynne Goodwin, Sam Pitluck, Iain Anderson, Amrita Pati, Natalia Ivanova, Konstantinos Mavromatis, Amy Chen, Krishna Palaniappan, Patrik D’haeseleer, Markus Göker, Jim Bristow, Jonathan A. Eisen, Victor Markowitz, Philip Hugenholtz, Nikos C. Kyrpides, Hans Peter Klenk, Patrick Chain
Meeting report for the 1st skin microbiota workshop, boulder, CO October 15-16 2012
Tập 9 - Trang 1-7 - 2014
Jack A Gilbert, Madeleine Ball, Paul Blainey, Martin J Blaser, Brendan JM Bohannan, Ashley Bateman, John Bunge, Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello, Slava Epstein, Noah Fierer, Dirk Gevers, Tracy Grikscheit, Leila J Hamdan, James Harvey, Curtis Huttenhower, Benjamin Kirkup, Heidi H Kong, Christian Lauber, Katherine P Lemon, Susan V Lynch, Lance Martin, Charlene Mello, Joseph Palma, Roy Parker, Joseph Petrosino, Julia A Segre, Leslie Vosshall, Rui Yi, Rob Knight
This report details the outcome of the 1st Skin Microbiota Workshop, Boulder, CO, held on October 15th-16th 2012. The workshop was arranged to bring Department of Defense personnel together with experts in microbial ecology, human skin physiology and anatomy, and computational techniques for interrogating the microbiome to define research frontiers at the intersection of these important areas. The workshop outlined a series of questions and created several working groups to address those questions, specifically to promote interdisciplinary activity and potential future collaboration. The US Army provided generous grant support and the meeting was organized and hosted by the University of Colorado at Boulder. A primary forward vision of the meeting was the importance of understanding skin microbial communities to improve the health and stealth of US Army warfighters.
Draft genome sequence of the coccolithovirus EhV-84
Tập 5 - Trang 1-11 - 2011
Jozef I. Nissimov, Charlotte A. Worthy, Paul Rooks, Johnathan A. Napier, Susan A. Kimmance, Matthew R. Henn, Hiroyuki Ogata, Michael J. Allen
The Coccolithoviridae is a recently discovered group of viruses that infect the marine coccolithophorid Emiliania huxleyi. Emiliania huxleyi virus 84 (EhV-84) has a 160–180 nm diameter icosahedral structure and a genome of approximately 400 kbp. Here we describe the structural and genomic features of this virus, together with a near complete draft genome sequence (∼99%) and its annotation. This is the fourth genome sequence of a member of the coccolithovirus family.
Complete genome sequence of the lignin-degrading bacterium Klebsiella sp. strain BRL6-2
Tập 9 - Trang 1-9 - 2014
Hannah L Woo, Nicholas R Ballor, Terry C Hazen, Julian L Fortney, Blake Simmons, Karen Walston Davenport, Lynne Goodwin, Natalia Ivanova, Nikos C Kyrpides, Konstantinos Mavromatis, Tanja Woyke, Janet Jansson, Jeff Kimbrel, Kristen M DeAngelis
In an effort to discover anaerobic bacteria capable of lignin degradation, we isolated Klebsiella sp. strain BRL6-2 on minimal media with alkali lignin as the sole carbon source. This organism was isolated anaerobically from tropical forest soils collected from the Bisley watershed at the Ridge site in the El Yunque National Forest in Puerto Rico, USA, part of the Luquillo Long-Term Ecological Research Station. At this site, the soils experience strong fluctuations in redox potential and are characterized by cycles of iron oxidation and reduction. Genome sequencing was targeted because of its ability to grow on lignin anaerobically and lignocellulolytic activity via in vitro enzyme assays. The genome of Klebsiella sp. strain BRL6-2 is 5.80 Mbp with no detected plasmids, and includes a relatively small arsenal of genes encoding lignocellulolytic carbohydrate active enzymes. The genome revealed four putative peroxidases including glutathione and DyP-type peroxidases, and a complete protocatechuate pathway encoded in a single gene cluster. Physiological studies revealed Klebsiella sp. strain BRL6-2 to be relatively stress tolerant to high ionic strength conditions. It grows in increasing concentrations of ionic liquid (1-ethyl-3-methyl-imidazolium acetate) up to 73.44 mM and NaCl up to 1.5 M.
Genomic Standards Consortium Projects
Tập 9 - Trang 599-601 - 2014
Dawn Field, Peter Sterk, Renzo Kottmann, J. Wim De Smet, Linda Amaral-Zettler, Guy Cochrane, James R. Cole, Neil Davies, Peter Dawyndt, George M. Garrity, Jack A. Gilbert, Frank Oliver Glöckner, Lynette Hirschman, Hans-Peter Klenk, Rob Knight, Nikos Kyrpides, Folker Meyer, Ilene Karsch-Mizrachi, Norman Morrison, Robert Robbins, Inigo San Gil, Susanna Sansone, Lynn Schriml, Tatiana Tatusova, Dave Ussery, Pelin Yilmaz, Owen White, John Wooley, Gregory Caporaso
The Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC) is an open-membership community that was founded in 2005 to work towards the development, implementation and harmonization of standards in the field of genomics. Starting with the defined task of establishing a minimal set of descriptions the GSC has evolved into an active standards-setting body that currently has 18 ongoing projects, with additional projects regularly proposed from within and outside the GSC. Here we describe our recently enacted policy for proposing new activities that are intended to be taken on by the GSC, along with the template for proposing such new activities.
Conceptualizing a Genomics Software Institute (GSI)
Tập 6 - Trang 136-144 - 2012
Jack A. Gilbert, Charlie Catlett, Narayan Desai, Rob Knight, Owen White, Robert Robbins, Rajesh Sankaran, Susanna-Assunta Sansone, Dawn Field, Folker Meyer
Microbial ecology has been enhanced greatly by the ongoing ‘omics revolution, bringing half the world’s biomass and most of its biodiversity into analytical view for the first time; indeed, it feels almost like the invention of the microscope and the discovery of the new world at the same time. With major microbial ecology research efforts accumulating prodigious quantities of sequence, protein, and metabolite data, we are now poised to address environmental microbial research at macro scales, and to begin to characterize and understand the dimensions of microbial biodiversity on the planet. What is currently impeding progress is the need for a framework within which the research community can develop, exchange and discuss predictive ecosystem models that describe the biodiversity and functional interactions. Such a framework must encompass data and metadata transparency and interoperation; data and results validation, curation, and search; application programming interfaces for modeling and analysis tools; and human and technical processes and services necessary to ensure broad adoption. Here we discuss the need for focused community interaction to augment and deepen established community efforts, beginning with the Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC), to create a science-driven strategic plan for a Genomic Software Institute (GSI).
Meeting Report: “Metagenomics, Metadata and Meta-analysis” (M3) Special Interest Group at ISMB 2009
Tập 1 - Trang 278-282 - 2009
Dawn Field, Iddo Friedberg, Peter Sterk, Renzo Kottmann, Frank Oliver Glöckner, Lynette Hirschman, George M. Garrity, Guy Cochrane, John Wooley, Jack Gilbert
This report summarizes the proceedings of the “Metagenomics, Metadata and Meta-analysis” (M3) Special Interest Group (SIG) meeting held at the Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology 2009 conference. The Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC) hosted this meeting to explore the bottlenecks and emerging solutions for obtaining biological insights through large-scale comparative analysis of metagenomic datasets. The M3 SIG included 16 talks, half of which were selected from submitted abstracts, a poster session and a panel discussion involving members of the GSC Board. This report summarizes this one-day SIG, attempts to identify shared themes and recapitulates community recommendations for the future of this field. The GSC will also host an M3 workshop at the Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing (PSB) in January 2010. Further information about the GSC and its range of activities can be found at http://www.gensc.org/ .
Meeting Report from the Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC) Workshop 9
Tập 3 - Trang 216-224 - 2010
Tanja Davidsen, Ramana Madupu, Peter Sterk, Dawn Field, George Garrity, Jack Gilbert, Frank Oliver Glöckner, Lynette Hirschman, Eugene Kolker, Renzo Kottmann, Nikos Kyrpides, Folker Meyer, Norman Morrison, Lynn Schriml, Tatiana Tatusova, John Wooley
This report summarizes the proceedings of the 9th workshop of the Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC), held at the J. Craig Venter Institute, Rockville, MD, USA. It was the first GSC workshop to have open registration and attracted over 90 participants. This workshop featured sessions that provided overviews of the full range of ongoing GSC projects. It included sessions on Standards in Genomic Sciences, the open access journal of the GSC, building standards for genome annotation, the M5 platform for next-generation collaborative computational infrastructures, building ties with the biodiversity research community and two discussion panels with government and industry participants. Progress was made on all fronts, and major outcomes included the completion of the MIENS specification for publication and the formation of the Biodiversity working group.
Data shopping in an open marketplace: Introducing the Ontogrator web application for marking up data using ontologies and browsing using facets
Tập 4 - Trang 286-292 - 2011
Norman Morrison, David Hancock, Lynette Hirschman, Peter Dawyndt, Bert Verslyppe, Nikos Kyrpides, Renzo Kottmann, Pelin Yilmaz, Frank Oliver Glöckner, Jeff Grethe, Tim Booth, Peter Sterk, Goran Nenadic, Dawn Field
In the future, we hope to see an open and thriving data market in which users can find and select data from a wide range of data providers. In such an open access market, data are products that must be packaged accordingly. Increasingly, eCommerce sellers present heterogeneous product lines to buyers using faceted browsing. Using this approach we have developed the Ontogrator platform, which allows for rapid retrieval of data in a way that would be familiar to any online shopper. Using Knowledge Organization Systems (KOS), especially ontologies, Ontogrator uses text mining to mark up data and faceted browsing to help users navigate, query and retrieve data. Ontogrator offers the potential to impact scientific research in two major ways: 1) by significantly improving the retrieval of relevant information; and 2) by significantly reducing the time required to compose standard database queries and assemble information for further research. Here we present a pilot implementation developed in collaboration with the Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC) that includes content from the StrainInfo, GOLD, CAMERA, Silva and Pubmed databases. This implementation demonstrates the power of ontogration and highlights that the usefulness of this approach is fully dependent on both the quality of data and the KOS (ontologies) used. Ideally, the use and further expansion of this collaborative system will help to surface issues associated with the underlying quality of annotation and could lead to a systematic means for accessing integrated data resources.
Extending Standards for Genomics and Metagenomics Data: A Research Coordination Network for the Genomic Standards Consortium (RCN4GSC)
Tập 1 - Trang 87-90 - 2009
John C. Wooley, Dawn Field, Frank-Oliver Glöckner
Through a newly established Research Coordination Network for the Genomic Standards Consortium (RCN4GSC), the GSC will continue its leadership in establishing and integrating genomic standards through community-based efforts. These efforts, undertaken in the context of genomic and metagenomic research aim to ensure the electronic capture of all genomic data and to facilitate the achievement of a community consensus around collecting and managing relevant contextual information connected to the sequence data. The GSC operates as an open, inclusive organization, welcoming inspired biologists with a commitment to community service. Within the collaborative framework of the ongoing, international activities of the GSC, the RCN will expand the range of research domains engaged in these standardization efforts and sustain scientific networking to encourage active participation by the broader community. The RCN4GSC, funded for five years by the US National Science Foundation, will primarily support outcome-focused working meetings and the exchange of early-career scientists between GSC research groups in order to advance key standards contributions such as GCDML. Focusing on the timely delivery of the extant GSC core projects, the RCN will also extend the pioneering efforts of the GSC to engage researchers active in developing ecological, environmental and biodiversity data standards. As the initial goals of the GSC are increasingly achieved, promoting the comprehensive use of effective standards will be essential to ensure the effective use of sequence and associated data, to provide access for all biologists to all of the information, and to create interdisciplinary opportunities for discovery. The RCN will facilitate these implementation activities through participation in major scientific conferences and presentations on scientific advances enabled by community usage of genomic standards.