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Ontology for MicroRNA Target
Last uploaded:
January 5, 2021
Acronym | OMIT |
Visibility | Public |
Description | The purpose of the OMIT ontology is to establish data exchange standards and common data elements in the microRNA (miR) domain. Biologists (cell biologists in particular) and bioinformaticians can make use of OMIT to leverage emerging semantic technologies in knowledge acquisition and discovery for more effective identification of important roles performed by miRs in humans' various diseases and biological processes (usually through miRs' respective target genes). OMIT has reused and extended a set of well-established concepts from existing bio-ontologies, e.g., Gene Ontology, Sequence Ontology, Protein Ontology, NCBI Organism Taxonomy, Human Disease Ontology, Foundational Model of Anatomy, and so forth. |
Status | Alpha |
Format | OWL |
Contact | Jingshan Huang, huang@southalabama.edu |
Categories | Biological Process, Cell, Gene Product, Human, Molecule, Protein |
Groups | OBO Foundry |
Version | Released | Uploaded | Downloads |
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OBO 4.0-12122013-2338 (Parsed, Indexed, Metrics, Annotator) | 01/05/2021 | 01/05/2021 | OWL | CSV | RDF/XML | Diff |
OBO 4.0-12122013-2338 (Archived) | 08/20/2015 | 08/20/2015 | OWL | Diff |
OBO 4.0-12122013-2338 (Archived) | 08/20/2015 | 06/12/2015 | OWL | Diff |
OBO 4.0-12122013-2338 (Archived) | 06/12/2015 | 06/12/2015 | OBO | Diff |
OBO 4.0-12122013-2338 (Archived) | 06/12/2015 | 06/12/2015 | OBO | Diff |
OBO 4.0-12122013-2338 (Archived) | 12/14/2013 | 12/20/2013 | OBO | Diff |
OWL 3.98-12142013-2227 (Archived) | 12/14/2013 | 12/14/2013 | OWL | Diff |
OWL 3.98-12142013-2227 (Archived) | 12/14/2013 | 12/14/2013 | OWL | Diff |
OWL 3.97-12142013-2227 (Archived) | 12/14/2013 | 12/14/2013 | OWL | Diff |
OWL 3.96-12142013-2227 (Archived) | 12/14/2013 | 12/14/2013 | OWL | Diff |
OWL 3.95-12142013-2227 (Archived) | 12/14/2013 | 12/14/2013 | OWL | Diff |
OBO 3.95-12142013-2227 (Archived) | 12/14/2013 | 12/14/2013 | OWL |
OBO 3.95-12142013-2227 (Archived) | 12/14/2013 | 12/14/2013 | OWL |
OBO 3.94-12142013-2216 (Archived) | 12/12/2013 | 12/13/2013 | OBO |
OBO 3.93-12132013-2104 (Archived) | 12/12/2013 | 12/13/2013 | OBO |
OBO 3.92-12122013-2104 (Archived) | 12/12/2013 | 12/12/2013 | OBO |
OBO 3.91-12122013-2104 (Archived) | 12/12/2013 | 12/12/2013 | OBO | Diff |
OBO 3.91 (Archived) | 12/12/2013 | 12/12/2013 | OBO | Diff |
OBO 3.9 (Archived) | 12/12/2013 | 12/12/2013 | OBO | Diff |
OBO 3.71 (Archived) | 12/11/2013 | 12/11/2013 | OBO | Diff |
OBO 3.71 (Archived) | 12/11/2013 | 12/11/2013 | OBO | Diff |
OBO 3.7 (Archived) | 12/10/2013 | 12/11/2013 | OBO | Diff |
OBO 3.7 (Archived) | 12/10/2013 | 12/11/2013 | OBO |
OBO 3.6 (Archived) | 12/10/2013 | 12/05/2013 | OBO | Diff |
OWL 3.6 (Archived) | 12/05/2013 | 12/05/2013 | OWL | Diff |
OWL 3.6 (Archived) | 11/03/2013 | 12/05/2013 | OWL | Diff |
OWL 3.6 (Archived) | 11/03/2013 | 12/05/2013 | OWL | Diff |
OBO 3.5 (Archived) | 11/03/2013 | 11/03/2013 | OBO | Diff |
OWL 3.5 (Archived) | 11/03/2013 | 11/03/2013 | OWL |
OBO 3.3 (Archived) | 10/31/2013 | 10/31/2013 | OBO |
OBO 3.2 (Archived) | 10/31/2013 | 10/27/2013 | OBO |
OWL 3.1 (Archived) | 10/26/2013 | 10/26/2013 | OWL |
OBO 3.1 (Archived) | 10/26/2013 | 10/24/2013 | OBO |
OWL 2.1 (Archived) | 10/20/2013 | 10/18/2013 | OWL |
OBO 2.0 (Archived) | 10/18/2013 | 10/18/2013 | OBO |
1.0 (Archived) | 10/08/2013 | 10/07/2013 | OBO |
1.0 (Archived) | 10/08/2013 | 10/07/2013 | OBO |
2 (Archived) | 10/08/2013 | 10/07/2013 | OWL |
1.1.1 (Archived) | 10/25/2012 | 10/26/2012 | OWL |
0.2 (Archived) | 06/29/2010 | 06/30/2010 | OWL |
0.1 (Archived) | 05/09/2010 | 05/31/2010 | OWL |
more... |
No views of OMIT available
Classes | 90,916 |
Individuals | 18 |
Properties | 47 |
Maximum depth | 18 |
Maximum number of children | 59,874 |
Average number of children | 10 |
Classes with a single child | 3,306 |
Classes with more than 25 children | 141 |
Classes with no definition | 30,516 |
Jump to:
Id | http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/BFO_0000140
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/BFO_0000140
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Preferred Name | continuant fiat boundary |
Definitions |
b is a continuant fiat boundary = Def. b is an immaterial entity that is of zero, one or two dimensions and does not include a spatial region as part. (axiom label in BFO2 Reference: [029-001])
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Type | http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#Class |
All Properties
definition | b is a continuant fiat boundary = Def. b is an immaterial entity that is of zero, one or two dimensions and does not include a spatial region as part. (axiom label in BFO2 Reference: [029-001]) |
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label | continuant fiat boundary
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prefLabel | continuant fiat boundary
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has associated axiom(fol) | (iff (ContinuantFiatBoundary a) (and (ImmaterialEntity a) (exists (b) (and (or (ZeroDimensionalSpatialRegion b) (OneDimensionalSpatialRegion b) (TwoDimensionalSpatialRegion b)) (forall (t) (locatedInAt a b t)))) (not (exists (c t) (and (SpatialRegion c) (continuantPartOfAt c a t)))))) // axiom label in BFO2 CLIF: [029-001]
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editor note | BFO 2 Reference: In BFO 1.1 the assumption was made that the external surface of a material entity such as a cell could be treated as if it were a boundary in the mathematical sense. The new document propounds the view that when we talk about external surfaces of material objects in this way then we are talking about something fiat. To be dealt with in a future version: fiat boundaries at different levels of granularity.More generally, the focus in discussion of boundaries in BFO 2.0 is now on fiat boundaries, which means: boundaries for which there is no assumption that they coincide with physical discontinuities. The ontology of boundaries becomes more closely allied with the ontology of regions.
BFO 2 Reference: a continuant fiat boundary is a boundary of some material entity (for example: the plane separating the Northern and Southern hemispheres; the North Pole), or it is a boundary of some immaterial entity (for example of some portion of airspace). Three basic kinds of continuant fiat boundary can be distinguished (together with various combination kinds [29
Continuant fiat boundary doesn't have a closure axiom because the subclasses don't necessarily exhaust all possibilites. An example would be the mereological sum of two-dimensional continuant fiat boundary and a one dimensional continuant fiat boundary that doesn't overlap it. The situation is analogous to temporal and spatial regions.
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has associated axiom(nl) | Every continuant fiat boundary is located at some spatial region at every time at which it exists
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isDefinedBy | |
BFO OWL specification label | cf-boundary
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prefixIRI | BFO:0000140
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subClassOf | |
type | |
BFO CLIF specification label | ContinuantFiatBoundary
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Widget type | Widget demonstration |
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Step 2: Follow the Instructions
For more help visit NCBO Widget Wiki |
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Example 1 (start typing the class name to get its full URI)
Example 2 (get the ID for a class) Example 3 (get the preferred name for a class) Step 2: Follow the Instructions
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Step 2: Follow the InstructionsCopy the code below and paste it to your HTML page <iframe frameborder="0" src="/widgets/visualization?ontology=OMIT&class=http%3A%2F%2Fpurl.obolibrary.org%2Fobo%2FOMIT_0069185&apikey=YOUR_API_KEY"></iframe> For more help visit NCBO Widget Wiki |
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Step 2: Follow the InstructionsCopy the code below and paste it to your HTML page <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/widgets/jquery.ncbo.tree.css"> <script src="/widgets/jquery.ncbo.tree-2.0.2.js"></script> <div id="widget_tree"></div> var widget_tree = $("#widget_tree").NCBOTree({ apikey: "YOUR_API_KEY", ontology: "OMIT" }); You can also view a detailed demonstration For more help visit NCBO Widget Wiki |