Structured vocabularies for proteins
Access Status
Open access
Authors
Chang, Elizabeth
Dillon, Tharam S.
Sidhu, Amandeep
Date
2005Type
Conference Paper
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Chang, Elizabeth and Dillon, T.S. and Sidhu, Amandeep. 2005. : Structured vocabularies for proteins, in Khoo-Tan, P.H. (ed), 12th International Conference on Biomedical Engineering, Dec 07 2005. Singapore: IFMBE - The International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering.
Source Title
IFMBE Proceedings, vol. 12, 2005 (12th ICBME 2005)
Source Conference
12th International Conference on Biomedical Engineering
Faculty
Curtin Business School
School of Information Systems
School
Centre for Extended Enterprises and Business Intelligence
Collection
Abstract
In this paper we introduce various vocabularies and definitions used for defining Protein Ontology. Protein Ontology provides the technical and scientific infrastructure and knowledge to allow description and analysis of relationships between various proteins. Protein Ontology uses relevant protein data sources of information like PDB, SCOP, and OMIM. Protein Ontology describes: Protein Sequence and Structure Information, Protein Folding Process, Cellular Functions of Proteins, Molecular Bindings internal and external to Proteins, and Constraints affecting the Final Protein Conformation.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Dillon, Tharam S.; Sidhu, Amandeep; Chang, Elizabeth (2005)In this paper, we proposed a Protein Ontology to integrate protein data and information from various Protein Data Sources. Protein Ontology provides the technical and scientific infrastructure and knowledge to allow ...
-
Chang, Elizabeth; Sidhu, Amandeep; Sidhu, B.; Dillon, Tharam S. (2005)The rapid generation of accessible protein data sources has generated confusion over protein data representation. The protein ontology project seeks to provide a set of structured vocabularies for protein domains that can ...
-
Hussain, Farookh Khadeer; Sidhu, Amandeep; Dillon, Tharam S.; Chang, Elizabeth (2006)Biomedical Ontologies are huge. It is not possible for any one person to manage and engineer a complete ontology. They would need the help of Research Assistants and other people to develop and maintain the ontology. In ...