I've been playing with
RDF/semantic web for a time and then today I had a glance with
Gene Onotolgy (GO) although I don' have currently any project dealing with expression/clusering/etc... First of all, it seems that GO is stored using the
OBO format rather than
RDF. At this time I don't know the consequences of this but I imagine that I won't be able to use standard XML/RDF tools (XSL,DOM,
Protege,
Jena...), can GO handles OWL-like relationships (InverseFunctional, Symetric, Transitive...) ? Anyway is this really useful in GO ? I remember there was a paper published in Nature Genetics titled "
Are the current ontologies in biology good ontologies?".
the failure of many bio-ontologies to follow international standards for ontology design and description is hampering their application and threatens to restrict their future use.
I also started my experience with GO by trying to
submit a new term "3' RNA binding" in this ontology to be inserted between
GO:0003723 RNA binding and
GO:0008143 Poly(A) binding, in order to assign this new term to the
Rotavirus Non structural protein 3 (NSP3) wich binds specificaly the 3' end of viral mRNAs. The term was not reviewed yet.
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