Title: The Nomenclature Revolution
1The Nomenclature Revolution
- Hester Wain
- HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee
http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/nomenclature/
2What The Papers Say...
3The Role of HGNC
- Guidelines White et al (Genomics 1997)
- http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/nomenclature/guidelines.
html - Updated guidelines to be published in 2002
- Assign approved gene symbols
- Collate and curate data
- Maintain symbol database (Genew)
- Co-ordination with other public databases
4Definitions
- Gene name a brief and specific description
which conveys the character or function of the
gene/gene product, but does not attempt to
describe everything known about it.
Gene Symbol an abbreviation/acronym of the gene
name, designated by upper-case Latin letters or
by a combination of upper-case letters and Arabic
numerals.
5Symbol Criteria
- Unique
- Meaningful
- Systematic
- Consistent
614,338
7Data Management
- Database Genew (ver 3.0)
- Stable numerate HGNC IDs
- Sequence data store, local BLAST
- Automatic updates from Locuslink, GDB, MGD,
SWISS-PROT - Streamlined tracking system for correspondence
- Will be upgraded to enable online editing
8Genew Data Flow
Online Genew Search Engine Search
Retrieval Gene Symbol Gene Symbol Gene Name
Gene Name Alias Alias Cytogenetic
Location OMIM Number PMID
Genew Public Data Private Data
Online Text Files http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/public
-files/nomen/nomeids.txt http//www.gene.ucl.ac.u
k/public-files/nomen/ens1.txt http//www.gene.ucl
.ac.uk/public-files/nomen/ens2.txt
http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/public-files/nomen/ens3
.txt http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/public-files/nomen
/ens4.txt http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/public-files/
nomen/ens5.txt http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/public-f
iles/nomen/ens6.txt http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/pub
lic-files/nomen/chr20.txt http//www.gene.ucl.ac.u
k/public-files/nomen/chr21.txt http//www.gene.uc
l.ac.uk/public-files/nomen/chr22.txt
9Databases Using Approved Symbols
Ensembl http//ensembl.ebi.ac.uk/ GENATLAS
http//bisance.citi2.fr/GENATLAS/ GeneCards
http//bioinformatics.weizmann.ac.il/cards/ The
Genome Database (GDB) http//gdbwww.gdb.org/ Human
Gene Mutation Database http//www.hgmd.org/ Locus
Link http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/LocusLink/ MGD,
Mouse Genome Informatics http//www.informatics.ja
x.org/ Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man
http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Omim/ SWISS-PROT
http//www.expasy.ch/sprot/ UCSC Human Genome
Project Working Draft http//genome.cse.ucsc.edu/
10The Benefits of Approved Nomenclature
- One gene symbol
- User friendly
- Simplified information retrieval
- Database co-ordination
- Efficient use of resources
- Systematic assignment of new symbols
11Quote of the Day
I would rather use someone elses toothbrush,
than their nomenclature
12When Do You Name a Gene?
- When you want to publish it
- When you want to talk about it
- When you want to add it to a database
- But only when you have some information about it
13Symbol Assignment by Sequence
- Identical sequence
- Verify approved symbol
- Highly similar
- Assign next available symbol in the family series
- Highly similar, known pseudogene
- Assign a symbol in the family series with the
suffix P - Moderately similar
- Assign appropriate symbol with the suffix L for
like - No Homology
- Corf (chromosome open reading frame number )
- DS (DNA segment number)
14Symbol Assignment Using Other Information
- Domain structures
- Information from submitters
- Information from literature
- Information from other databases
- Specialist advice
15Chromosome 20
Approved prior to collaboration
Genes without symbols Approved symbols
895
16Chromosome 21
Approved prior to collaboration
Genes without symbols Approved symbols
288
17Chromosome 22
Approved prior to collaboration
Genes without symbols Approved symbols
811
18Why Use Approved Nomenclature?
- Standardisation
- Communication of information
- Manual curation
- Data storage, management and analysis
- Linking genes to disease and physiology
- Community collaboration
- Consistency across species
19HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee
http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/nomenclature/ Email
nome_at_galton.ucl.ac.uk
Dr Sue Povey Dr Hester Wain Dr Elspeth Bruford Dr
Ruth Lovering Dr Michael Lush Dr Mathew
Wright
The work of the HGNC is supported by NIH contract
N01-LM-9-3533 (60 total) and by the UK Medical
Research Council (40).
20Definition of a gene
- HGNC
- A gene is a DNA segment that contributes to
phenotype/function. In the absence of
demonstrated function a gene may be characterized
by sequence, transcription or homology. White et
al 1997