Plant Germplasm Preservation Research Unit Site Logo
ARS Home About Us Helptop nav spacerContact Us En Espanoltop nav spacer
Printable VersionPrintable Version     E-mail this pageE-mail this page
Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture
Search
  Advanced Search
 
Programs and Projects
Subjects of Investigation
Research to Develop Strategies and Technologies for Preserving Genetic Diversity in ex situ Genebanks (PGPR)
 

Research Project: RESEARCH TO DEVELOP STRATEGIES AND TECHNOLOGIES FOR PRESERVING PLANT GENETIC DIVERSITY IN EX SITU GENEBANKS

Location: Plant Germplasm Preservation Research Unit

Title: Uniform standards for genome databases in forest and fruit trees

Authors
item Wegrzyn, Jill -
item Main, Dorrie -
item Figueroa, Ben -
item Choi, Minyoung -
item Neale, David -
item Jung, Sook -
item Stanton, Margaret -
item Zheng, Ping -
item Ficklin, Stephen -
item Cho, Ilhyuong -
item Peace, Cameron -
item Evans, Kate -
item Volk, Gayle
item Oraguzie, Nnadozie -
item Chen, Chunxian -
item Gmitter, Fred -
item Abbott, Albert -

Submitted to: Tree Genetics and Genomes
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: February 16, 2012
Publication Date: March 27, 2012
Citation: Wegrzyn, J.L., Main, D., Figueroa, B., Choi, M., Neale, D.B., Jung, S., Stanton, M., Zheng, P., Ficklin, S., Cho, I., Peace, C., Evans, K., Volk, G.M., Oraguzie, N., Chen, C., Gmitter, F.G., Abbott, A.G. 2012. Uniform standards for genome databases in forest and fruit trees. Tree Genetics and Genomes. 8:549-557.

Interpretive Summary: Genomic databases for tree fruit and forestry species contain critical data for research and breeding programs. These data are most valuable when descriptive information about the physical traits, experimental conditions, and environmental conditions are also available. This manuscript describes the development and integration of standardized vocabularies that are being developed to increase the value of the genomic data within the TreeGenes and tfGDR databases.

Technical Abstract: TreeGenes and tfGDR serve the international forestry and fruit tree genomics research communities, respectively. These databases hold similar sequence data and provide resources for the submission and recovery of this information in order to enable comparative genomics research. Large-scale genotype and phenotype projects have recently spawned the development of independent tools and interfaces within these repositories to deliver information to both geneticists and breeders. The increase in next generation sequencing projects has increased the amount of data as well as the scale of analysis that can be performed. These two repositories are now working towards a similar goal of archiving the diverse, independent data sets generated from genotype/phenotype experiments. This is achieved through focused development on data input standards (templates), pipelines for the storage and automated curation, and consistent annotation efforts through the application of widely accepted ontologies to improve the extraction and exchange of the data for comparative analysis. Efforts toward standardization are not limited to genotype/phenotype experiments but are also being applied to other data types to improve gene prediction and annotation for de novo sequencing projects. The resources developed towards these goals represent the first large-scale coordinated effort in plant databases to add informatic value to diverse genotype/phenotype experiments.

   

 
Project Team
Walters, Christina
Volk, Gayle
Richards, Christopher
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Plant Genetic Resources, Genomics and Genetic Improvement (301)
 
Related Projects
   KINETICS OF SEED DETERIORATION IN DIVERSE LINES OF RYE, WHEAT AND TRITICALE
   ASSESSMENT OF GENETIC EROSION IN FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY IN BRASSICA GERMPLASM COLLECTIONS
   CRYOPRESERVATION AND CRYOTHERAPY OF TROPICAL CROPS
   PLANT COLLECTION AND DIVERSITY ANALYSES OF MALUS FUSCA
   CITRUS CRYOPRESERVATION TO INCREASE SECURITY OF CRITICAL COLLECTIONS
   DEVELOPMENT OF NEW TECHNOLOGIES TO ELIMINATE HUANGLONGBING FROM BUDWOOD SOURCE
   DEVELOPMENT OF CRYOTHERAPY AS AN IMPROVED METHOD OF ELIMINATING GRAFT TRANSMISSABLE PATHOGENS IN CITRUS
 
 
Last Modified: 06/19/2013
ARS Home | USDA.gov | Site Map | Policies and Links 
FOIA | Accessibility Statement | Privacy Policy | Nondiscrimination Statement | Information Quality | USA.gov | White House