Difference between revisions of "What's staying in postgres?"

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*ncRNA
 
*ncRNA
 
*uncloned loci
 
*uncloned loci
**sup-36 (note that sup-36(WBGene00006341) was killed right about the same time we were doing the new uploads, i.e. 2013-11-20.  The sup-36 annotations to WBGene0006341 were included in the WS241 upload, but deleted from the OA on 2013-11-25 and added to sup-36(WBGene000018164) in Protein2GO on 2013-11-25).
+
**sup-36 (note that sup-36(WBGene00006341) was killed right about the same time we were doing the new uploads, i.e. 2013-11-20.  The sup-36 annotations to WBGene0006341 were included in the WS241 upload, but deleted from the OA on 2013-11-25 and added to sup-36(WBGene000018164) in Protein2GO on 2013-11-25.
 
*IEP evidence code - select ones; will need to add these back to Protein2GO and then delete from tazendra
 
*IEP evidence code - select ones; will need to add these back to Protein2GO and then delete from tazendra
 
**IEP evidence code annotations made to proteins will eventually be manually deleted from postgres and entered into protein2go other specific annotations that have unique issues
 
**IEP evidence code annotations made to proteins will eventually be manually deleted from postgres and entered into protein2go other specific annotations that have unique issues

Latest revision as of 18:47, 25 November 2013

For now, we are keeping several types of annotations in postgres:

  • ncRNA
  • uncloned loci
    • sup-36 (note that sup-36(WBGene00006341) was killed right about the same time we were doing the new uploads, i.e. 2013-11-20. The sup-36 annotations to WBGene0006341 were included in the WS241 upload, but deleted from the OA on 2013-11-25 and added to sup-36(WBGene000018164) in Protein2GO on 2013-11-25.
  • IEP evidence code - select ones; will need to add these back to Protein2GO and then delete from tazendra
    • IEP evidence code annotations made to proteins will eventually be manually deleted from postgres and entered into protein2go other specific annotations that have unique issues
    • fox-1 annotations that have yDp13 in with/from - will need to work out with uniprot how to handle these
    • jnk-1 and sir-2.1 annotations that have a WBTransgene in the with/from column - will need to work out with uniprot how to handle these
    • Cre-vbh-1 annotations - will be added to uniprot manually and then deleted from postgres
    • gst-10 - annotations will be added to uniprot manually using a doi as reference id and then deleted from postgres
    • MTCE.26 - annotations will be added to uniprot manually - need to update gp2protein file, but also need to check on status of uniprot identifiers in xrefs.txt file for elegans mitochondrial proteins
  • Genes for which there isn't a 1:1 correspondence between gene and protein in UniProt (e.g., actins (fixed by Swiss-Prot; needs WB update), histones, eef-1A.1, .2, etc.)
    • These genes will just have to be dealt with on a case-by-case basis.

Archiving, Deleting Old Annotations

  1. We created one new annotation, for mir-80 (WBGene00003308), in the OA before we deleted all of the GO annotations housed in Protein2GO. We did this so that we'd have a new pgid (14232) from which to iterate new pgids going forward. We did this because the OA assigns pgid's by looking at the highest value and then iterating +1. Since the annotations remaining in the OA likely did not include the highest pgid, we wanted to create a new highest pgid so that if we ever had to restore the archived annotations, there would be no pgid collisions.
  2. As of 2013-11-22, there are a total of 170 WBGenes and their annotations left in the OA on tazendra.



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