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Wiley InterScience

Journal of Anatomy

Journal of Anatomy

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Volume 206 Issue 1, Pages 1 - 16

Published Online: 28 Jan 2005

Journal compilation © 2010 Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland



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REVIEW
Anatomics: the intersection of anatomy and bioinformatics
Jonathan B. L. Bard
  Division of Biomedical Science, University of Edinburgh, UK
 Correspondence Dr Jonathan B. L. Bard, Division of Biomedical Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9XD, UK. E: j.bard@ed.ac.uk
Copyright © Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2005
KEYWORDS
anatomics • C. elegans anatomy • databases • Drosophila anatomy • gene expression database • human anatomy • mereology • mouse anatomy • ontology • systems biology

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionDefinitionsOntologiesAnatomical ontologiesReferences

Computational resources are now using the tissue names of the major model organisms so that tissue-associated data can be archived in and retrieved from databases on the basis of developing and adult anatomy. For this to be done, the set of tissues in that organism (its anatome) has to be organized in a way that is computer-comprehensible. Indeed, such formalization is a necessary part of what is becoming known as systems biology, in which explanations of high-level biological phenomena are not only sought in terms of lower-level events, but are articulated within a computational framework. Lists of tissue names alone, however, turn out to be inadequate for this formalization because tissue organization is essentially hierarchical and thus cannot easily be put into tables, the natural format of relational databases. The solution now adopted is to organize the anatomy of each organism as a hierarchy of tissue names and linking relationships (e.g. the tibia is PART OF the leg, the tibia IS-A bone) within what are known as ontologies. In these, a unique ID is assigned to each tissue and this can be used within, for example, gene-expression databases to link data to tissue organization, and also used to query other data sources (interoperability), while inferences about the anatomy can be made within the ontology on the basis of the relationships. There are now about 15 such anatomical ontologies, many of which are linked to organism databases; these ontologies are now publicly available at the Open Biological Ontologies website (http://obo.sourceforge.net) from where they can be freely downloaded and viewed using standard tools. This review considers how anatomy is formalized within ontologies, together with the problems that have had to be solved for this to be done. It is suggested that the appropriate term for the analysis, computer formulation and use of the anatome is anatomics.


Accepted for publication 1 December 2004

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.0021-8782.2005.00376.x About DOI

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