@article{95, author = {M Harris and J Clark and A Ireland and J Lomax and M Ashburner and R Foulger and K Eilbeck and S Lewis and B Marshall and C Mungall and J Richter and G Rubin and J Blake and C Bult and M Dolan and H Drabkin and J Eppig and D Hill and L Ni and M Ringwald and R Balakrishnan and J Cherry and K Christie and M Costanzo and S Dwight and S Engel and D Fisk and J Hirschman and E Hong and R Nash and A Sethuraman and C Theesfeld and D Botstein and K Dolinski and B Feierbach and T Berardini and S Mundodi and S Rhee and R Apweiler and D Barrell and E Camon and E Dimmer and V Lee and R Chisholm and P Gaudet and W Kibbe and R Kishore and E Schwarz and P Sternberg and M Gwinn and L Hannick and J Wortman and M Berriman and V Wood and N de la Cruz and P Tonellato and P Jaiswal and T Seigfried and R White and Gene Consortium}, title = {The Gene Ontology (GO) database and informatics resource.}, abstract = {

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.

}, year = {2004}, journal = {Nucleic acids research}, volume = {32}, pages = {D258-61}, month = {01/2004}, issn = {1362-4962}, language = {eng}, }