Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ranjana Kishore is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ranjana Kishore.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

The Gene Ontology (GO) database and informatics resource.

Midori A. Harris; Jennifer I. Clark; Amelia Ireland; Jane Lomax; Michael Ashburner; R. Foulger; K. Eilbeck; Suzanna E. Lewis; B. Marshall; Christopher J. Mungall; John Richter; Gerald M. Rubin; Judith A. Blake; Mary E. Dolan; Harold J. Drabkin; Janan T. Eppig; David P. Hill; Li Ni; Martin Ringwald; Rama Balakrishnan; J. M. Cherry; Karen R. Christie; Maria C. Costanzo; Selina S. Dwight; Stacia R. Engel; Dianna G. Fisk; Jodi E. Hirschman; Eurie L. Hong; Robert S. Nash; Anand Sethuraman

The Gene Ontology (GO) project (http://www. geneontology.org/) provides structured, controlled vocabularies and classifications that cover several domains of molecular and cellular biology and are freely available for community use in the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences. Many model organism databases and genome annotation groups use the GO and contribute their annotation sets to the GO resource. The GO database integrates the vocabularies and contributed annotations and provides full access to this information in several formats. Members of the GO Consortium continually work collectively, involving outside experts as needed, to expand and update the GO vocabularies. The GO Web resource also provides access to extensive documentation about the GO project and links to applications that use GO data for functional analyses.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Gene Ontology Consortium: going forward

Judith A. Blake; Juancarlos Chan; Ranjana Kishore; Paul W. Sternberg; K. Van Auken; Hans-Michael Müller; James Done; Yuling Li

The Gene Ontology (GO; http://www.geneontology.org) is a community-based bioinformatics resource that supplies information about gene product function using ontologies to represent biological knowledge. Here we describe improvements and expansions to several branches of the ontology, as well as updates that have allowed us to more efficiently disseminate the GO and capture feedback from the research community. The Gene Ontology Consortium (GOC) has expanded areas of the ontology such as cilia-related terms, cell-cycle terms and multicellular organism processes. We have also implemented new tools for generating ontology terms based on a set of logical rules making use of templates, and we have made efforts to increase our use of logical definitions. The GOC has a new and improved web site summarizing new developments and documentation, serving as a portal to GO data. Users can perform GO enrichment analysis, and search the GO for terms, annotations to gene products, and associated metadata across multiple species using the all-new AmiGO 2 browser. We encourage and welcome the input of the research community in all biological areas in our continued effort to improve the Gene Ontology.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

WormBase: a multi-species resource for nematode biology and genomics.

Todd W. Harris; Nansheng Chen; Fiona Cunningham; Marcela K. Tello-Ruiz; Igor Antoshechkin; Carol Bastiani; Tamberlyn Bieri; Darin Blasiar; Keith Bradnam; Juancarlos Chan; Chao-Kung Chen; Wen J. Chen; Paul H. Davis; Eimear E. Kenny; Ranjana Kishore; Daniel Lawson; Raymond Y. N. Lee; Hans-Michael Müller; Cecilia Nakamura; Philip Ozersky; Andrei Petcherski; Anthony Rogers; Aniko Sabo; Erich M. Schwarz; Kimberly Van Auken; Qinghua Wang; Richard Durbin; John Spieth; Paul W. Sternberg; Lincoln Stein

WormBase (http://www.wormbase.org/) is the central data repository for information about Caenorhabditis elegans and related nematodes. As a model organism database, WormBase extends beyond the genomic sequence, integrating experimental results with extensively annotated views of the genome. The WormBase Consortium continues to expand the biological scope and utility of WormBase with the inclusion of large-scale genomic analyses, through active data and literature curation, through new analysis and visualization tools, and through refinement of the user interface. Over the past year, the nearly complete genomic sequence and comparative analyses of the closely related species Caenorhabditis briggsae have been integrated into WormBase, including gene predictions, ortholog assignments and a new synteny viewer to display the relationships between the two species. Extensive site-wide refinement of the user interface now provides quick access to the most frequently accessed resources and a consistent browsing experience across the site. Unified single-page views now provide complete summaries of commonly accessed entries like genes. These advances continue to increase the utility of WormBase for C.elegans researchers, as well as for those researchers exploring problems in functional and comparative genomics in the context of a powerful genetic system.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

The Gene Ontology project in 2008

Midori A. Harris; Jennifer I. Deegan; Amelia Ireland; Jane Lomax; Michael Ashburner; Susan Tweedie; Seth Carbon; Suzanna E. Lewis; Christopher J. Mungall; John Richter; Karen Eilbeck; Judith A. Blake; Alexander D. Diehl; Mary E. Dolan; Harold Drabkin; Janan T. Eppig; David P. Hill; Ni Li; Martin Ringwald; Rama Balakrishnan; Gail Binkley; J. Michael Cherry; Karen R. Christie; Maria C. Costanzo; Qing Dong; Stacia R. Engel; Dianna G. Fisk; Jodi E. Hirschman; Benjamin C. Hitz; Eurie L. Hong

The Gene Ontology (GO) project (http://www.geneontology.org/) provides a set of structured, controlled vocabularies for community use in annotating genes, gene products and sequences (also see http://www.sequenceontology.org/). The ontologies have been extended and refined for several biological areas, and improvements to the structure of the ontologies have been implemented. To improve the quantity and quality of gene product annotations available from its public repository, the GO Consortium has launched a focused effort to provide comprehensive and detailed annotation of orthologous genes across a number of ‘reference’ genomes, including human and several key model organisms. Software developments include two releases of the ontology-editing tool OBO-Edit, and improvements to the AmiGO browser interface.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Gene Ontology Annotations and Resources

Judith A. Blake; Juancarlos Chan; Ranjana Kishore; Paul W. Sternberg; K. Van Auken

The Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium (GOC, http://www.geneontology.org) is a community-based bioinformatics resource that classifies gene product function through the use of structured, controlled vocabularies. Over the past year, the GOC has implemented several processes to increase the quantity, quality and specificity of GO annotations. First, the number of manual, literature-based annotations has grown at an increasing rate. Second, as a result of a new ‘phylogenetic annotation’ process, manually reviewed, homology-based annotations are becoming available for a broad range of species. Third, the quality of GO annotations has been improved through a streamlined process for, and automated quality checks of, GO annotations deposited by different annotation groups. Fourth, the consistency and correctness of the ontology itself has increased by using automated reasoning tools. Finally, the GO has been expanded not only to cover new areas of biology through focused interaction with experts, but also to capture greater specificity in all areas of the ontology using tools for adding new combinatorial terms. The GOC works closely with other ontology developers to support integrated use of terminologies. The GOC supports its user community through the use of e-mail lists, social media and web-based resources.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

WormBase: a comprehensive resource for nematode research

Todd W. Harris; Igor Antoshechkin; Tamberlyn Bieri; Darin Blasiar; Juancarlos Chan; Wen J. Chen; Norie De La Cruz; Paul H. Davis; Margaret Duesbury; Ruihua Fang; Jolene S. Fernandes; Michael Han; Ranjana Kishore; Raymond Y. N. Lee; Hans-Michael Müller; Cecilia Nakamura; Philip Ozersky; Andrei Petcherski; Arun Rangarajan; Anthony Rogers; Gary Schindelman; Erich M. Schwarz; Mary Ann Tuli; Kimberly Van Auken; Daniel Wang; Xiaodong Wang; Gary Williams; Karen Yook; Richard Durbin; Lincoln Stein

WormBase (http://www.wormbase.org) is a central data repository for nematode biology. Initially created as a service to the Caenorhabditis elegans research field, WormBase has evolved into a powerful research tool in its own right. In the past 2 years, we expanded WormBase to include the complete genomic sequence, gene predictions and orthology assignments from a range of related nematodes. This comparative data enrich the C. elegans data with improved gene predictions and a better understanding of gene function. In turn, they bring the wealth of experimental knowledge of C. elegans to other systems of medical and agricultural importance. Here, we describe new species and data types now available at WormBase. In addition, we detail enhancements to our curatorial pipeline and website infrastructure to accommodate new genomes and an extensive user base.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

WormBase: a comprehensive data resource for Caenorhabditis biology and genomics

Nansheng Chen; Todd W. Harris; Igor Antoshechkin; Carol Bastiani; Tamberlyn Bieri; Darin Blasiar; Keith Bradnam; Payan Canaran; Juancarlos Chan; Chao-Kung Chen; Wen J. Chen; Fiona Cunningham; Paul H. Davis; Eimear E. Kenny; Ranjana Kishore; Daniel Lawson; Raymond Y. N. Lee; Hans-Michael Müller; Cecilia Nakamura; Shraddha Pai; Philip Ozersky; Andrei Petcherski; Anthony Rogers; Aniko Sabo; Erich M. Schwarz; Kimberly Van Auken; Qinghua Wang; Richard Durbin; John Spieth; Paul W. Sternberg

WormBase (http://www.wormbase.org), the model organism database for information about Caenorhabditis elegans and related nematodes, continues to expand in breadth and depth. Over the past year, WormBase has added multiple large-scale datasets including SAGE, interactome, 3D protein structure datasets and NCBI KOGs. To accommodate this growth, the International WormBase Consortium has improved the user interface by adding new features to aid in navigation, visualization of large-scale datasets, advanced searching and data mining. Internally, we have restructured the database models to rationalize the representation of genes and to prepare the system to accept the genome sequences of three additional Caenorhabditis species over the coming year.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

WormBase 2012: more genomes, more data, new website

Karen Yook; Todd W. Harris; Tamberlyn Bieri; Abigail Cabunoc; Juancarlos Chan; Wen J. Chen; Paul H. Davis; Norie De La Cruz; Adrian Duong; Ruihua Fang; Uma Ganesan; Christian A. Grove; Kevin L. Howe; Snehalata Kadam; Ranjana Kishore; Raymond Y. N. Lee; Yuling Li; Hans-Michael Müller; Cecilia Nakamura; Bill Nash; Philip Ozersky; Michael Paulini; Daniela Raciti; Arun Rangarajan; Gary Schindelman; Xiaoqi Shi; Erich M. Schwarz; Mary Ann Tuli; Kimberly Van Auken; Daniel Wang

Since its release in 2000, WormBase (http://www.wormbase.org) has grown from a small resource focusing on a single species and serving a dedicated research community, to one now spanning 15 species essential to the broader biomedical and agricultural research fields. To enhance the rate of curation, we have automated the identification of key data in the scientific literature and use similar methodology for data extraction. To ease access to the data, we are collaborating with journals to link entities in research publications to their report pages at WormBase. To facilitate discovery, we have added new views of the data, integrated large-scale datasets and expanded descriptions of models for human disease. Finally, we have introduced a dramatic overhaul of the WormBase website for public beta testing. Designed to balance complexity and usability, the new site is species-agnostic, highly customizable, and interactive. Casual users and developers alike will be able to leverage the public RESTful application programming interface (API) to generate custom data mining solutions and extensions to the site. We report on the growth of our database and on our work in keeping pace with the growing demand for data, efforts to anticipate the requirements of users and new collaborations with the larger science community.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2009

The Gene Ontology's Reference Genome Project: A Unified Framework for Functional Annotation across Species

Pascale Gaudet; Rex L. Chisholm; Tanya Z. Berardini; Emily Dimmer; Stacia R. Engel; Petra Fey; David P. Hill; Doug Howe; James C. Hu; Rachael P. Huntley; Varsha K. Khodiyar; Ranjana Kishore; Donghui Li; Ruth C. Lovering; Fiona M. McCarthy; Li Ni; Victoria Petri; Deborah A. Siegele; Susan Tweedie; Kimberly Van Auken; Valerie Wood; Siddhartha Basu; Seth Carbon; Mary E. Dolan; Christopher J. Mungall; Kara Dolinski; Paul D. Thomas; Michael Ashburner; Judith A. Blake; J. Michael Cherry

The Gene Ontology (GO) is a collaborative effort that provides structured vocabularies for annotating the molecular function, biological role, and cellular location of gene products in a highly systematic way and in a species-neutral manner with the aim of unifying the representation of gene function across different organisms. Each contributing member of the GO Consortium independently associates GO terms to gene products from the organism(s) they are annotating. Here we introduce the Reference Genome project, which brings together those independent efforts into a unified framework based on the evolutionary relationships between genes in these different organisms. The Reference Genome project has two primary goals: to increase the depth and breadth of annotations for genes in each of the organisms in the project, and to create data sets and tools that enable other genome annotation efforts to infer GO annotations for homologous genes in their organisms. In addition, the project has several important incidental benefits, such as increasing annotation consistency across genome databases, and providing important improvements to the GOs logical structure and biological content.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

WormBase 2014: new views of curated biology

Todd W. Harris; Joachim Baran; Tamberlyn Bieri; Abigail Cabunoc; Juancarlos Chan; Wen J. Chen; Paul H. Davis; James Done; Christian A. Grove; Kevin L. Howe; Ranjana Kishore; Raymond Y. N. Lee; Yuling Li; Hans-Michael Müller; Cecilia Nakamura; Philip Ozersky; Michael Paulini; Daniela Raciti; Gary Schindelman; Mary Ann Tuli; Kimberly Van Auken; Daniel Wang; Xiaodong Wang; Gary Williams; Jennifer Wong; Karen Yook; Tim Schedl; Jonathan Hodgkin; Matthew Berriman; Paul J. Kersey

WormBase (http://www.wormbase.org/) is a highly curated resource dedicated to supporting research using the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans. With an electronic history predating the World Wide Web, WormBase contains information ranging from the sequence and phenotype of individual alleles to genome-wide studies generated using next-generation sequencing technologies. In recent years, we have expanded the contents to include data on additional nematodes of agricultural and medical significance, bringing the knowledge of C. elegans to bear on these systems and providing support for underserved research communities. Manual curation of the primary literature remains a central focus of the WormBase project, providing users with reliable, up-to-date and highly cross-linked information. In this update, we describe efforts to organize the original atomized and highly contextualized curated data into integrated syntheses of discrete biological topics. Next, we discuss our experiences coping with the vast increase in available genome sequences made possible through next-generation sequencing platforms. Finally, we describe some of the features and tools of the new WormBase Web site that help users better find and explore data of interest.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ranjana Kishore's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Juancarlos Chan

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hans-Michael Müller

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kimberly Van Auken

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Raymond Y. N. Lee

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Todd W. Harris

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wen J. Chen

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cecilia Nakamura

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mary Ann Tuli

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paul W. Sternberg

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tamberlyn Bieri

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge