| Literature DB >> 28694792 |
Emma Griffiths1, Damion Dooley2, Morag Graham3,4, Gary Van Domselaar3,4, Fiona S L Brinkman1, William W L Hsiao2,5.
Abstract
Globalization of food networks increases opportunities for the spread of foodborne pathogens beyond borders and jurisdictions. High resolution whole-genome sequencing (WGS) subtyping of pathogens promises to vastly improve our ability to track and control foodborne disease, but to do so it must be combined with epidemiological, clinical, laboratory and other health care data (called "contextual data") to be meaningfully interpreted for regulatory and health interventions, outbreak investigation, and risk assessment. However, current multi-jurisdictional pathogen surveillance and investigation efforts are complicated by time-consuming data re-entry, curation and integration of contextual information owing to a lack of interoperable standards and inconsistent reporting. A solution to these challenges is the use of 'ontologies' - hierarchies of well-defined and standardized vocabularies interconnected by logical relationships. Terms are specified by universal IDs enabling integration into highly regulated areas and multi-sector sharing (e.g., food and water microbiology with the veterinary sector). Institution-specific terms can be mapped to a given standard at different levels of granularity, maximizing comparability of contextual information according to jurisdictional policies. Fit-for-purpose ontologies provide contextual information with the auditability required for food safety laboratory accreditation. Our research efforts include the development of a Genomic Epidemiology Ontology (GenEpiO), and Food Ontology (FoodOn) that harmonize important laboratory, clinical and epidemiological data fields, as well as existing food resources. These efforts are supported by a global consortium of researchers and stakeholders worldwide. Since foodborne diseases do not respect international borders, uptake of such vocabularies will be crucial for multi-jurisdictional interpretation of WGS results and data sharing.Entities:
Keywords: contextual metadata; foodborne pathogen surveillance; genomic epidemiology; ontology; outbreak investigations
Year: 2017 PMID: 28694792 PMCID: PMC5483436 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
A selection of ontology and Minimum Information (MI) checklists for the standardization of genomics metadata and epidemiological, clinical, and laboratory contextual information.
| Resource | Description | URL |
|---|---|---|
| Codex Alimentarius | Internationally recognized standards, codes of practice, guidelines Recommendations relating to foods, food production, and food safety Commissioned by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization | |
| LanguaL | Created by US FDA’s Centre for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition 14 main facets, or hierarchies of descriptive terms (35,000 foods) Available in many languages. | |
| Food Ex2 | Created by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) Food classification designed to facilitate food exposure assessment | |
| USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference | Food dictionary containing over 9000 foods Each item lists nutrient values and weights per portion | |
| Compendium of Analytical Methods | Created by Health Canada Food list containing several hundred items organized by food category Designed to foster compliance of the food industry with standards and guidelines relative to microbiological and extraneous material in foods | |
| Food Commodity Classification Scheme | Created by the US Center for Disease Control Designed for source attribution studies | |
| The Agriculture Ontology (AgrO) | The ontology of agronomic practices, agronomic techniques, and agronomic variables used in agronomic experiments | |
| Antimicrobial Resistance Ontology (ARO) | Ontology of antibiotics, resistance genes, and associated phenotypes | |
| Basic Formal Ontology (BFO) | Upper level ontology designed to support information retrieval, analysis and integration in scientific, and other domains | |
| BRENDA Tissue Ontology (BTO) | Structured controlled vocabulary for the source of an enzyme comprising tissues, cell lines, cell types, and cell cultures | |
| Chemical Entities of Biological Interest Ontology (ChEBI) | Structured classification of molecular entities of biological interest focusing on ‘small’ chemical compounds | |
| Cell Ontology (CL) | Structured controlled vocabulary for cell types in animals | |
| Human Disease Ontology (DOID) | Ontology for describing the classification of human diseases organized by etiology | |
| EMBRACE Data and Methods Ontology (EDAM) | Ontology of common bioinformatics operations, topics, types of data including identifiers, and formats | |
| Environment Ontology (ENVO) | Contained descriptors of a range of food products and food production environments Limited in scope, based on user suggestions | |
| Epidemiology (EPO) | Ontology designed to support the semantic annotation of epidemiology resources | |
| Exposure (EXO) | Vocabularies for describing exposure data to inform understanding of environmental health | |
| Foundational Model of Anatomy (FMA) | Ontology representing phenotypic structures of the human body | |
| FooDB Ontology (FoodO) | Designed to represent the FooDB database describing food items and chemical composition (additives, ingredients, etc) | |
| Food Ontology (FoodOn) | Farm-to-Fork descriptors of food entities and food production environments from point of production through processing, distribution and consumption Created by the FoodOn Consortium | |
| Genomic Epidemiology Ontology (GenEpiO) | Controlled vocabulary for infectious disease surveillance and outbreak investigations implementing whole genome sequencing Ongoing development via the International GenEpiO Consortium | |
| Infectious Disease Ontology (IDO) | Ontology describing entities relevant to both biomedical and clinical aspects of most infectious diseases | |
| Next-Generation Sequencing Ontology (NGSOnto) | Structured vocabulary to capture the workflow of all the processes involved in a Next Generation Sequencing project | |
| Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI) | Ontology for the description of life-science and clinical investigations | |
| Phenotypic Quality Ontology (PATO) | Ontology of biomedical phenotypic qualities (properties, attributes or characteristics) | |
| Relation Ontology (RO) | Biology-specific relations to connect entities and classes Intended for standardization across OBO Foundry Library of ontologies | |
| The Sustainable Development Goals Interface Ontology (SDGIO) | The Sustainable Development Goals Interface Ontology of United Nation Environmental Program | |
| Sequence Ontology (SO) | Structured controlled vocabulary for sequence annotation, for the exchange of annotation data and for the description of sequence objects in databases | |
| Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine (SNOMED) | Represents clinical phrases captured by the clinician Created by The International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) | |
| Clinical Signs and Symptoms Ontology (SYMP) | Ontology to provide robust means to disambiguate, capture and document clinical signs, and symptoms | |
| Pathogen Transmission Ontology (TRANS) | Ontology for describing transmission methods of human disease pathogens, from one host, reservoir, or source to another host | |
| Microbial Typing Ontology (TypOn) | Structured vocabulary to describe microbial typing methods for the identification of bacterial isolates and their classification | |
| Multi-Species Anatomy Ontology (UBERON) | Integrated cross-species anatomy ontology covering animals and bridging multiple species-specific ontologies | |
| MIxS | A minimal metadata standard checklist developed by the Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC) for reporting information about any (x) nucleotide sequence | |
| Project and Sample Application Standard | Created by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease Genome Sequencing Center and Bioinformatics Resource Center (GSCID/BRC) Specifically addresses metadata types that should be attached to human pathogen genomic sequences | |
| Minimum Information about a Phylogenetic Analysis (MIAPA) | Community-wide effort to develop minimal reporting standards for phylogenetic analyses | |
| STROME-ID guidelines | “Strengthening the reporting of molecular epidemiology for infectious diseases” Standards for reporting molecular epidemiology results including measures of genetic diversity, laboratory methods, sample collection, etc | |
| The Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) | Aim to create a common, harmonized framework to enable secure sharing of genomic and clinical data | |
| The Global Microbial Identifier (GMI) | Platform for storing whole genome sequencing (WGS) data of microorganisms to detect outbreaks and emerging pathogens | |
| The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) | Leading global environmental authority Promotes the coherent implementation of actions for sustainable development (Sustainable Development Goals) | |
| United Nations Environment Live | Interactive platform for environmental assessments and peer review of the SDGIO |