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Author

Wood

Other affiliations: Wellcome Trust
Bio: Wood is an academic researcher from Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Annotation & Open Biomedical Ontologies. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 3574 citations. Previous affiliations of Wood include Wellcome Trust.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Midori A. Harris, Jennifer I. Clark1, Ireland A1, Jane Lomax1, Michael Ashburner2, Michael Ashburner1, R. Foulger1, R. Foulger2, Karen Eilbeck3, Karen Eilbeck1, Suzanna E. Lewis3, Suzanna E. Lewis1, B. Marshall3, B. Marshall1, Christopher J. Mungall3, Christopher J. Mungall1, J. Richter3, J. Richter1, Gerald M. Rubin3, Gerald M. Rubin1, Judith A. Blake1, Carol J. Bult1, Dolan M1, Drabkin H1, Janan T. Eppig1, Hill Dp1, L. Ni1, Ringwald M1, Rama Balakrishnan4, Rama Balakrishnan1, J. M. Cherry1, J. M. Cherry4, Karen R. Christie1, Karen R. Christie4, Maria C. Costanzo4, Maria C. Costanzo1, Selina S. Dwight1, Selina S. Dwight4, Stacia R. Engel1, Stacia R. Engel4, Dianna G. Fisk4, Dianna G. Fisk1, Jodi E. Hirschman4, Jodi E. Hirschman1, Eurie L. Hong4, Eurie L. Hong1, Robert S. Nash1, Robert S. Nash4, Anand Sethuraman1, Anand Sethuraman4, Chandra L. Theesfeld1, Chandra L. Theesfeld4, David Botstein1, David Botstein5, Kara Dolinski5, Kara Dolinski1, Becket Feierbach1, Becket Feierbach5, Tanya Z. Berardini6, Tanya Z. Berardini1, S. Mundodi6, S. Mundodi1, Seung Y. Rhee6, Seung Y. Rhee1, Rolf Apweiler1, Daniel Barrell1, Camon E1, E. Dimmer1, Lee1, Rex L. Chisholm, Pascale Gaudet1, Pascale Gaudet7, Warren A. Kibbe1, Warren A. Kibbe7, Ranjana Kishore8, Ranjana Kishore1, Erich M. Schwarz1, Erich M. Schwarz8, Paul W. Sternberg8, Paul W. Sternberg1, M. Gwinn1, Hannick L1, Wortman J1, Matthew Berriman9, Matthew Berriman1, Wood1, Wood9, de la Cruz N1, de la Cruz N10, Peter J. Tonellato10, Peter J. Tonellato1, Pankaj Jaiswal11, Pankaj Jaiswal1, Seigfried T1, Seigfried T12, White R13, White R1 
TL;DR: The Gene Ontology (GO) project as discussed by the authors provides structured, controlled vocabularies and classifications that cover several domains of molecular and cellular biology and are freely available for community use in the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences.
Abstract: The Gene Ontology (GO) project (http://www.geneontology.org/) provides structured, controlled vocabularies and classifications that cover several domains of molecular and cellular biology and are freely available for community use in the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences. Many model organism databases and genome annotation groups use the GO and contribute their annotation sets to the GO resource. The GO database integrates the vocabularies and contributed annotations and provides full access to this information in several formats. Members of the GO Consortium continually work collectively, involving outside experts as needed, to expand and update the GO vocabularies. The GO Web resource also provides access to extensive documentation about the GO project and links to applications that use GO data for functional analyses.

3,565 citations

Tanya Z. Berardini, Dong Li, Eva Huala, Susan M. Bridges, Shane C. Burgess, Fiona M. McCarthy, Seth Carbon, Suzanna E. Lewis, Christopher J. Mungall, A Abdulla, Wood, Erika Feltrin, Giorgio Valle, Rex L. Chisholm, Petra Fey, P Gaudet, Warren A. Kibbe, S. Basu, Y Bushmanova, Karen Eilbeck, Deborah A. Siegele, B. K. McIntosh, Daniel P. Renfro, Adrienne E. Zweifel, James C. Hu, Michael Ashburner, Susan Tweedie, Yasmin Alam-Faruque, Rolf Apweiler, A. Auchinchloss, A Bairoch, Daniel Barrell, David Binns, M. C. Blatter, Lydie Bougueleret, Emmanuel Boutet, Lionel Breuza, Alan Bridge, Paul Browne, W. M. Chan, Elisabeth Coudert, L Daugherty, E. Dimmer, Ruth Y. Eberhardt, Anne Estreicher, L Famiglietti, S. Ferro-Rojas, M Feuermann, Rebecca E. Foulger, Nadine Gruaz-Gumowski, Ursula Hinz, Rachael P. Huntley, S. Jimenez, Florence Jungo, Guillaume Keller, Kati Laiho, Duncan Legge, P Lemercier, Damien Lieberherr, Michele Magrane, Claire O'Donovan, Ivo Pedruzzi, Sylvain Poux, Catherine Rivoire, Bernd Roechert, Tony Sawford, Maria Victoria Schneider, Eleanor J Stanley, Andre Stutz, Shyamala Sundaram, Michael Tognolli, Ioannis Xenarios, Midori A. Harris, Jennifer I. Deegan, Amelia Ireland, Jane Lomax, Pankaj Jaiswal, Marcus C. Chibucos, Michelle G. Giglio, Jennifer R. Wortman, Linda Hannick, R Madupu, David Botstein, Kara Dolinski, Livstone, Rose Oughtred, Judith A. Blake, Carol J. Bult, Alexander D. Diehl, Mary E. Dolan, H. Drabkin, Janan T. Eppig, David P. Hill, L. Ni, Martin Ringwald, D. Sitnikov, C Collmer, T Torto-Alalibo, Stan Laulederkind, Mary Shimoyama, Simon N. Twigger, P D'Eustachio, Lisa Matthews, Rama Balakrishnan, Gail Binkley, J. M. Cherry, Karen R. Christie, Maria C. Costanzo, Engel, Dianna G. Fisk, Jodi E. Hirschman, Benjamin C. Hitz, El Hong, Cynthia J. Krieger, Miyasato, Robert S. Nash, Julie Park, Skrzypek, Sa Weng, Edith D. Wong, Martin Aslett, Juancarlos Chan, Ranjana Kishore, Paul W. Sternberg, K. Van Auken, Varsha K. Khodiyar, Ruth C. Lovering, P.J. Talmud, Doug Howe, Monte Westerfield 
01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: The Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium continues to develop, maintain and use a set of structured, controlled vocabularies for the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences and several new relationship types have been introduced and used to create links between and within the GO domains.
Abstract: The Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium (http://www.geneontology.org) (GOC) continues to develop, maintain and use a set of structured, controlled vocabularies for the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences. The GO ontologies are expanding both in content and in structure. Several new relationship types have been introduced and used, along with existing relationships, to create links between and within the GO domains. These improve the representation of biology, facilitate querying, and allow GO developers to systematically check for and correct inconsistencies within the GO. Gene product annotation using GO continues to increase both in the number of total annotations and in species coverage. GO tools, such as OBO-Edit, an ontology-editing tool, and AmiGO, the GOC ontology browser, have seen major improvements in functionality, speed and ease of use.

416 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Reactome Knowledgebase provides molecular details of signal transduction, transport, DNA replication, metabolism and other cellular processes as an ordered network of molecular transformations—an extended version of a classic metabolic map, in a single consistent data model.
Abstract: The Reactome Knowledgebase (www.reactome.org) provides molecular details of signal transduction, transport, DNA replication, metabolism and other cellular processes as an ordered network of molecular transformations-an extended version of a classic metabolic map, in a single consistent data model. Reactome functions both as an archive of biological processes and as a tool for discovering unexpected functional relationships in data such as gene expression pattern surveys or somatic mutation catalogues from tumour cells. Over the last two years we redeveloped major components of the Reactome web interface to improve usability, responsiveness and data visualization. A new pathway diagram viewer provides a faster, clearer interface and smooth zooming from the entire reaction network to the details of individual reactions. Tool performance for analysis of user datasets has been substantially improved, now generating detailed results for genome-wide expression datasets within seconds. The analysis module can now be accessed through a RESTFul interface, facilitating its inclusion in third party applications. A new overview module allows the visualization of analysis results on a genome-wide Reactome pathway hierarchy using a single screen page. The search interface now provides auto-completion as well as a faceted search to narrow result lists efficiently.

5,065 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: BioGRID is a freely accessible database of physical and genetic interactions that includes >116 000 interactions from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster and Homo sapiens.
Abstract: Access to unified datasets of protein and genetic interactions is critical for interrogation of gene/protein function and analysis of global network properties. BioGRID is a freely accessible database of physical and genetic interactions available at http://www.thebiogrid.org. BioGRID release version 2.0 includes >116 000 interactions from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster and Homo sapiens. Over 30 000 interactions have recently been added from 5778 sources through exhaustive curation of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae primary literature. An internally hyper-linked web interface allows for rapid search and retrieval of interaction data. Full or user-defined datasets are freely downloadable as tab-delimited text files and PSI-MI XML. Pre-computed graphical layouts of interactions are available in a variety of file formats. User-customized graphs with embedded protein, gene and interaction attributes can be constructed with a visualization system called Osprey that is dynamically linked to the BioGRID.

3,794 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: WEGO (Web Gene Ontology Annotation Plot) is a simple but useful tool for visualizing, comparing and plotting GO annotation results, designed to deal with the directed acyclic graph structure of GO to facilitate histogram creation of Go annotation results.
Abstract: Unified, structured vocabularies and classifications freely provided by the Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium are widely accepted in most of the large scale gene annotation projects. Consequently, many tools have been created for use with the GO ontologies. WEGO (Web Gene Ontology Annotation Plot) is a simple but useful tool for visualizing, comparing and plotting GO annotation results. Different from other commercial software for creating chart, WEGO is designed to deal with the directed acyclic graph structure of GO to facilitate histogram creation of GO annotation results. WEGO has been used widely in many important biological research projects, such as the rice genome project and the silkworm genome project. It has become one of the daily tools for downstream gene annotation analysis, especially when performing comparative genomics tasks. WEGO, along with the two other tools, namely External to GO Query and GO Archive Query, are freely available for all users at http://wego.genomics.org.cn. There are two available mirror sites at http://wego2.genomics.org.cn and http://wego.genomics.com.cn. Any suggestions are welcome at wego@genomics.org.cn.

2,460 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Oncomine, a bioinformatics initiative aimed at collecting, standardizing, analyzing, and delivering cancer transcriptome data to the biomedical research community, provides an update on the initiative, describes the database and analysis modules, and highlight several notable observations.

1,905 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
21 Oct 2004-Nature
TL;DR: Genome analysis provides a greatly improved fish gene catalogue, including identifying key genes previously thought to be absent in fish, and reconstructs much of the evolutionary history of ancient and recent chromosome rearrangements leading to the modern human karyotype.
Abstract: Tetraodon nigroviridis is a freshwater puffer fish with the smallest known vertebrate genome. Here, we report a draft genome sequence with long-range linkage and substantial anchoring to the 21 Tetraodon chromosomes. Genome analysis provides a greatly improved fish gene catalogue, including identifying key genes previously thought to be absent in fish. Comparison with other vertebrates and a urochordate indicates that fish proteins have diverged markedly faster than their mammalian homologues. Comparison with the human genome suggests ∼900 previously unannotated human genes. Analysis of the Tetraodon and human genomes shows that whole-genome duplication occurred in the teleost fish lineage, subsequent to its divergence from mammals. The analysis also makes it possible to infer the basic structure of the ancestral bony vertebrate genome, which was composed of 12 chromosomes, and to reconstruct much of the evolutionary history of ancient and recent chromosome rearrangements leading to the modern human karyotype.

1,889 citations