Literature DB >> 18564916

Toward a standards-compliant genomic and metagenomic publication record.

George M Garrity1, Dawn Field, Nikos Kyrpides, Lynette Hirschman, Susanna-Assunta Sansone, Samuel Angiuoli, James R Cole, Frank Oliver Glöckner, Eugene Kolker, George Kowalchuk, Mary Ann Moran, Dave Ussery, Owen White.   

Abstract

Increasingly, we are aware as a community of the growing need to manage the avalanche of genomic and metagenomic data, in addition to related data types like ribosomal RNA and barcode sequences, in a way that tightly integrates contextual data with traditional literature in a machine-readable way. It is for this reason that the Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC) formed in 2005. Here we suggest that we move beyond the development of standards and tackle standards compliance and improved data capture at the level of the scientific publication. We are supported in this goal by the fact that the scientific community is in the midst of a publishing revolution. This revolution is marked by a growing shift away from a traditional dichotomy between "journal articles" and "database entries" and an increasing adoption of hybrid models of collecting and disseminating scientific information. With respect to genomes and metagenomes and related data types, we feel the scientific community would be best served by the immediate launch of a central repository of short, highly structured "Genome Notes" that must be standards compliant. This could be done in the context of an existing journal, but we also suggest the more radical solution of launching a new journal. Such a journal could be designed to cater to a wide range of standards-related content types that are not currently centralized in the published literature. It could also support the demand for centralizing aspects of the "gray literature" (documents developed by institutions or communities) such as the call by the GSC for a central repository of Standard Operating Procedures describing the genomic annotation pipelines of the major sequencing centers. We argue that such an "eJournal," published under the Open Access paradigm by the GSC, could be an attractive publishing forum for a broader range of standardization initiatives within, and beyond, the GSC and thereby fill an unoccupied yet increasingly important niche within the current research landscape.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18564916     DOI: 10.1089/omi.2008.A2B2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  OMICS        ISSN: 1536-2310


  24 in total

Review 1.  Standardization and omics science: technical and social dimensions are inseparable and demand symmetrical study.

Authors:  Christina Holmes; Fiona McDonald; Mavis Jones; Vural Ozdemir; Janice E Graham
Journal:  OMICS       Date:  2010-06

2.  Fifteen years of microbial genomics: meeting the challenges and fulfilling the dream.

Authors:  Nikos C Kyrpides
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 54.908

3.  Extending Standards for Genomics and Metagenomics Data: A Research Coordination Network for the Genomic Standards Consortium (RCN4GSC).

Authors:  John C Wooley; Dawn Field; Frank-Oliver Glöckner
Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci       Date:  2009-07-20

4.  Signal processing for metagenomics: extracting information from the soup.

Authors:  Gail L Rosen; Bahrad A Sokhansanj; Robi Polikar; Mary Ann Bruns; Jacob Russell; Elaine Garbarine; Steve Essinger; Non Yok
Journal:  Curr Genomics       Date:  2009-11       Impact factor: 2.236

Review 5.  Marine microbial genomics in Europe: current status and perspectives.

Authors:  Frank Oliver Glöckner; Ian Joint
Journal:  Microb Biotechnol       Date:  2010-09       Impact factor: 5.813

Review 6.  Microbial community profiling for human microbiome projects: Tools, techniques, and challenges.

Authors:  Micah Hamady; Rob Knight
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2009-04-21       Impact factor: 9.043

Review 7.  The promise of multi-omics and clinical data integration to identify and target personalized healthcare approaches in autism spectrum disorders.

Authors:  Roger Higdon; Rachel K Earl; Larissa Stanberry; Caitlin M Hudac; Elizabeth Montague; Elizabeth Stewart; Imre Janko; John Choiniere; William Broomall; Natali Kolker; Raphael A Bernier; Eugene Kolker
Journal:  OMICS       Date:  2015-04

8.  Ground truth.

Authors:  George M Garrity
Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci       Date:  2009-09-24

9.  Answering biological questions: querying a systems biology database for nutrigenomics.

Authors:  Chris T Evelo; Kees van Bochove; Jahn-Takeshi Saito
Journal:  Genes Nutr       Date:  2010-10-30       Impact factor: 5.523

10.  The role of genomics in the identification, prediction, and prevention of biological threats.

Authors:  W Florian Fricke; David A Rasko; Jacques Ravel
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2009-10-26       Impact factor: 8.029

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