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Learn about the development and structure of PATO, a comprehensive ontology for describing phenotypes across various dimensions. Explore how entities and qualities are represented in PATO, its top-level divisions, and mapping to the Units Ontology.
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PATOAn ontology for phenotypes. The development of PATO is the work of George Gkoutos, supported by the NCBO, working in Cambridge.
Phenotype And Trait Ontology (PATO) • Phenotypes may be described in many different dimensions, e.g. • the biochemical ('alcohol dehydrogenase null') • the cellular ('cell division arrested at metaphase'), • the anatomical ('eye absent') • the behavioral (‘hyperactive’). • etc. • In whatever dimension and granularity, however, there is a commonality and the great majority of, if not all, phenotypic descriptions can be decomposed into two parts • An entity that is affected. This entity may be an enzyme, an anatomical structure or a complex biological process. • The qualities of that entity.
Features of Qualities • Qualities are the basic properties that we can perceive and/or measure: • colors, sizes, masses, lengths etc. • Qualities inhere to entities: every entity has certain qualities, which exist as long as that entity exists. • Qualities belong in a finite set of quality types (i.e. color, size etc) and inhere in specific individuals. Each quality is constantly dependent on the entity it inheres in.
PATO’s hierarchical organisation • At lower levels PATO is organized by the nature of the qualities: • Physical qualities, such as mass, velocity and color; • Cellular qualities, such as ploidy (which inhere in a cell or cell nucleus by virtue of the number of chromosomes it has) and cellular potential (capability of differentiating into other cell types); • Organismal qualities, such as behavioral qualities. • The leaf nodes of PATO represent specific qualities, such as “orange” (a kind of color), “concave” (a kind of shape) and “increased length” (a kind of size).
entity + quality Phenotypic Character (mouse anatomy: body + PATO: weight) (mouse body weight) (Drosophila anatomy: eye + PATO: color) (eye colour) (glucose concentration) (ChEBI: glucose + PATO: concentration) Phenotypic Character increased size [of a] hepatocellular carcinoma hepatocellular carcinoma (MPATH:357) has_qualityincreased size (PATO:0000586)
Representation of Phenotypic data Assay (eg. Histopathology, blood chemistry) {constrained_by} | (environmental & genetic)- {of type}- conditions Entity(eg. MA) - Quality(PATO) Entity(eg.MPATH) - Quality (PATO) Entity(eg. Cell) -Quality(PATO) {
Measurements • PATO – part of a representation of qualitative phenotypic information • More often than not it is important to record quantitative information that results from a specific measurement of a quality The tail of my mouse is 2.1 cm
PATO & measurements • Measurements involve units (Phenotypic Character + Unit) • UO – an ontology of units • UO’s top-level division is between primary base units of a particular measure and units that are derived from base units • mapping between the various scalar qualities (such as weight, height, concentration etc.) and the corresponding units used to measure those qualities
PATO Annotations • Descriptions can be pre- or post- composed • Post-coordinated • EQ methodology • PATO + Entity (quality bearer) • Entity = GO, AOs, Cell, etc. • NCBO fly-fish-human disease gene annotations • BIRN image annotation (neurodegenerative disease) • NESCent / AToL - evolutionary character matrices • … • Pre-coordinated • MGI Mouse genotype-phenotype annotation (Mammalian Phenotype) • Gramene trait annotation (Plant Trait Ontology) • Worm • …
Reconciling pre and post composed annotations • Retrospective PATO definitions of pre-coordinated terms in phenotype ontology • Precomposed Ontologies • Mammalian Phenotype • Plant trait • Worm phenotype • etc. • OMIM
EQ definitions Aristotelian definitions (genus-differentia) A <Q> *which* inheres_in an <E> [Term] id: MP:0001262 name: decreased body weight namespace:mammalian_phenotype_xp Synonym:low body weight Synonym: reduced body weight def: "lower than normal average weight “[] is_a: MP:0001259 ! abnormal body weight intersection_of: PATO:0000583 ! decreased weight intersection_of: MA:0002405 ! adult mouse
Example 1 • MP:0000350 – abnormal cell proliferation • MP:0000352 - decreased cell proliferation • .. • WBPhenotype0000171 – cell_proliferation_abnormal • WBPhenotype0000171 – cell_proliferation_reduced • ..
[Term] id: WBPhenotype0000171 ! cell_proliferation_abnormal Intersection_of: PATO:0000460 ! abnormal Intersection_of: inheres_in GO:0008283 ! cell proliferation [Term] id: WBPhenotype0000171 ! cell_proliferation_reduced Intersection_of: PATO:0000468 ! decreased Intersection_of: inheres_in GO:0008283 ! cell proliferation [Term] id: MP:0000350 ! abnormal cell proliferation Intersection_of: PATO:0000460 ! abnormal Intersection_of: inheres_in GO:0008283 ! cell proliferation [Term] id: MP:0000350 ! decreased cell proliferation Intersection_of: PATO:0000468 ! decreased Intersection_of: inheres_in GO:0008283 ! cell proliferation
Example 2MP, WBPhenotype, OMIM etc. • MP:0001265 – decreased body size • MP:0001255 – decreased body height • WBPhenotype0000229 – small • OMIM %210710 – short stature
[Term] id: MP:0001265 ! decreased body size intersection_of: PATO:0000587 ! decreased size intersection_of: inheres_in MA:0002405 ! adult mouse [Term] id: MP:0001255 ! decreased body height intersection_of: PATO:0000569 ! decreased height intersection_of: inheres_in MA:0002405 ! adult mouse [Term] id: WBPhenotype0000229 ! small intersection_of: PATO:0000587 ! decreased size intersection_of: OBO_REL:inheres_in WBls:0000041 ! Adult [Term] id: OMIM:xxxxxxx ! short stature intersection_of: PATO:0000587 ! decreased size intersection_of: OBO_REL:inheres_in FMA!:20394 ! Body [Term] id: OMIM:xxxxxxx ! short stature intersection_of: ATO:0000569 ! decreased height intersection_of: OBO_REL:inheres_in FMA:20394 ! Body
Assay Controlled Vocabulary • Abnormality • Relative_to • Ranges of values • Allows the schema to be dynamic • Definition of qualities and their relations • Explicit differences (between laboratories) • Allows labs around the world to “plug-in” their • assays to the schema Phenotypic Character Assay Phenotypic Character Phenotypic Character