The Gene Ontology (GO) project (http://www. geneontology.org/) provides structured, controlled vocabularies and classifications that cover several domains of molecular and cellular biology and are freely available for community use in the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences. Many model organism databases and genome annotation groups use the GO and contribute their annotation sets to the GO resource. The GO database integrates the vocabularies and contributed annotations and provides full access to this information in several formats. Members of the GO Consortium continually work collectively, involving outside experts as needed, to expand and update the GO vocabularies. The GO Web resource also provides access to extensive documentation about the GO project and links to applications that use GO data for functional analyses.
Graphical Abstract Highlights d SynGO is a public knowledge base and online analysis platform for synapse research d SynGO has annotated 1,112 genes with synaptic localization and/or function d SynGO genes are exceptionally large, well conserved, and intolerant to mutations d SynGO genes are strongly enriched among genes associated with brain disorders Correspondence guus.smit@cncr.vu.nl (A.B.S.), matthijs@cncr.vu.nl (M.V.) In BriefThe SynGO consortium presents a framework to annotate synaptic protein locations and functions and annotations for 1,112 synaptic genes based on published experimental evidence. SynGO reports exceptional features and disease associations for synaptic genes and provides an online data analysis platform. SUMMARYSynapses are fundamental information-processing units of the brain, and synaptic dysregulation is central to many brain disorders (''synaptopathies''). However, systematic annotation of synaptic genes and ontology of synaptic processes are currently lacking. We established SynGO, an interactive knowledge base that accumulates available research about synapse biology using Gene Ontology (GO) annotations to novel ontology terms: 87 synaptic locations and 179 synaptic processes. SynGO annotations are exclusively based on published, expert-curated evidence. Using 2,922 annotations for 1,112 genes, we show that synaptic genes are exceptionally well conserved and less tolerant to mutations than other genes. Many SynGO terms are significantly overrepresented among gene variations associated with intelligence, educational attainment, ADHD, autism, and bipolar disorder and among de novo variants associated with neurodevelopmental disorders, including schizophrenia. SynGO is a public, universal reference for synapse research and an online analysis platform for interpretation of large-scale -omics data (https://syngoportal.org and
BackgroundA major bottleneck in our understanding of the molecular underpinnings of life is the assignment of function to proteins. While molecular experiments provide the most reliable annotation of proteins, their relatively low throughput and restricted purview have led to an increasing role for computational function prediction. However, assessing methods for protein function prediction and tracking progress in the field remain challenging.ResultsWe conducted the second critical assessment of functional annotation (CAFA), a timed challenge to assess computational methods that automatically assign protein function. We evaluated 126 methods from 56 research groups for their ability to predict biological functions using Gene Ontology and gene-disease associations using Human Phenotype Ontology on a set of 3681 proteins from 18 species. CAFA2 featured expanded analysis compared with CAFA1, with regards to data set size, variety, and assessment metrics. To review progress in the field, the analysis compared the best methods from CAFA1 to those of CAFA2.ConclusionsThe top-performing methods in CAFA2 outperformed those from CAFA1. This increased accuracy can be attributed to a combination of the growing number of experimental annotations and improved methods for function prediction. The assessment also revealed that the definition of top-performing algorithms is ontology specific, that different performance metrics can be used to probe the nature of accurate predictions, and the relative diversity of predictions in the biological process and human phenotype ontologies. While there was methodological improvement between CAFA1 and CAFA2, the interpretation of results and usefulness of individual methods remain context-dependent.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13059-016-1037-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Background The UK 100,000 Genomes Project is in the process of investigating the role of genome sequencing of patients with undiagnosed rare disease following usual care, and the alignment of research with healthcare implementation in the UK’s national health service. (Other parts of this Project focus on patients with cancer and infection.) Methods We enrolled participants, collected clinical features with human phenotype ontology terms, undertook genome sequencing and applied automated variant prioritization based on virtual gene panels (PanelApp) and phenotypes (Exomiser), alongside identification of novel pathogenic variants through research analysis. We report results on a pilot study of 4660 participants from 2183 families with 161 disorders covering a broad spectrum of rare disease. Results Diagnostic yields varied by family structure and were highest in trios and larger pedigrees. Likely monogenic disorders had much higher diagnostic yields (35%) with intellectual disability, hearing and vision disorders, achieving yields between 40 and 55%. Those with more complex etiologies had an overall 25% yield. Combining research and automated approaches was critical to 14% of diagnoses in which we found etiologic non-coding, structural and mitochondrial genome variants and coding variants poorly covered by exome sequencing. Cohort-wide burden testing across 57,000 genomes enabled discovery of 3 new disease genes and 19 novel associations. Of the genetic diagnoses that we made, 24% had immediate ramifications for the clinical decision-making for the patient or their relatives. Conclusion Our pilot study of genome sequencing in a national health care system demonstrates diagnostic uplift across a range of rare diseases. (Funded by National Institute for Health Research and others)
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