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GO Weekly Ontology Report for 9 July 2011

Greetings GO ontology watchers,

The following weekly ontology reports are now available:

Ontology changes, full details: web page | text

Ontology changes, less detailed: web page | text

6th Renal GOA Initiative Newsletter

The sixth quarterly newsletter (October 2010) outlining the progression of the Renal Gene Ontology Annotation (GOA) Initiative is now available at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/GOA/kidney/newsletter/RenalGOANewsOct2010.pdf

April 2010 Renal GO Annotation newsletter now available!

The April 2010 newsletter from the Renal GO Annotation Initiative is now available online. This information-packed edition boasts updates on the renal target list and annotation status, the lowdown on recent renal-related ontology content development, and a heads-up about upcoming meetings and publications. It is available in PDF form for your downloading and saving pleasure. Enjoy!

Minutes for GO Consortium meeting now available

The minutes from the 2010 GO Consortium meeting held at Stanford University are now available on the wiki.

Third Renal GOA Newsletter

The January 2010 issue of the Renal GO Annotation Initiative newsletter is now available online:
http://www.ebi.ac.uk/GOA/kidney/newsletter/RenalGOANewsJan2010.pdf

Cardiovascular GO Annotation Initiative - Newsletter January 2010

CARDIOVASCULAR GENE ONTOLOGY ANNOTATION INITIATIVE
Providing Full Gene Ontology Annotation To Genes Associated With Cardiovascular Processes

Issue 8 - January 2010

Editor - Ruth Lovering

Special Report: The impact of a process centric approach on ontology development

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providing full GO annotation to genes associated with cardiovascular processes

Special Report: The GO Reference Genome Project - A Unified Framework for Functional Annotation across Species

The Reference Genome Project of the GO Consortium aims to comprehensively annotate all the gene products from human, as well as that of eleven important model organisms: Arabidopsis thaliana, Caenorhabditis elegans, Danio rerio, Dictyostelium discoideum, Drosophila melanogaster, Escherichia coli, Gallus gallus, Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Schizosaccharomyces pombe. These different species are being used to model various, complementary aspects of biology.

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