| Literature DB >> 21092105 |
Justin T Reese1, Christopher P Childers, Jaideep P Sundaram, C Michael Dickens, Kevin L Childs, Donald C Vile, Christine G Elsik.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A goal of the Bovine Genome Database (BGD; http://BovineGenome.org) has been to support the Bovine Genome Sequencing and Analysis Consortium (BGSAC) in the annotation and analysis of the bovine genome. We were faced with several challenges, including the need to maintain consistent quality despite diversity in annotation expertise in the research community, the need to maintain consistent data formats, and the need to minimize the potential duplication of annotation effort. With new sequencing technologies allowing many more eukaryotic genomes to be sequenced, the demand for collaborative annotation is likely to increase. Here we present our approach, challenges and solutions facilitating a large distributed annotation project. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: BGD has provided annotation tools that supported 147 members of the BGSAC in contributing 3,871 gene models over a fifteen-week period, and these annotations have been integrated into the bovine Official Gene Set. Our approach has been to provide an annotation system, which includes a BLAST site, multiple genome browsers, an annotation portal, and the Apollo Annotation Editor configured to connect directly to our Chado database. In addition to implementing and integrating components of the annotation system, we have performed computational analyses to create gene evidence tracks and a consensus gene set, which can be viewed on individual gene pages at BGD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21092105 PMCID: PMC3012608 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-11-645
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Exchange of data within BGD and between BGD and the bovine research community during the BGSAC annotation project [1]. Red lines indicate steps that require human intervention. Gray lines indicate steps that do not require human intervention.
Figure 2Improved BGD system for ongoing annotation of the bovine genome. The new features are 1) support for direct writebacks from the user's Apollo client to the intermediate Chado database, 2) support for launching and installing Apollo using Java WebStart, and 3) support for database auditing and rollbacks. Other components (e.g. genome browser, gene pages, BLAST site) are the same as those shown in Figure 1, and are not shown here. Red lines indicate steps that require human intervention. Gray lines indicate steps that do not require human intervention.