Extensive research over the past two decades has shown there is a remarkably consistent conservation of gene order within large segments of linkage groups in agriculturally important grasses such as rice, maize, sorghum, barley, oats, wheat, and rye. Grass genomes are substantially colinear at both large and short scales with each other, opening the possibility of using syntenic relationships to rapidly isolate and characterize homologues in maize, wheat, barley and sorghum.
As an information resource, Gramene's purpose is to provide added value to data sets available within the public sector, which will facilitate researchers' ability to understand the grass genomes and take advantage of genomic sequence known in one species for identifying and understanding corresponding genes, pathways and phenotypes in other grass species. This is achieved by building automated and curated relationships between cereals for both sequence and biology. The automated and curated relationships are queried and displayed using controlled vocabularies and web-based displays. The controlled vocabularies (Ontologies), currently being used include Gene ontology, Plant ontology, Trait ontology, Environment ontology and Gramene Taxonomy ontology. The web-based displays for phenotypes include the Genes and Quantitative Trait Loci (QTL) modules. Sequence based relationships are displayed in the Genomes module using the genome browser adapted from Ensembl, in the Maps module using the comparative map viewer (CMap) from GMOD, and in the Proteins module displays. BLAST is used to search for similar sequences. Literature supporting all the above data is organized in the Literature database.
This work was initially supported (2001-2004) by the USDA Initiative for Future Agriculture and Food Systems (IFAFS) (grant no. 00-52100-9622) and a Cooperative State Research and Education Service (CSREES) agreement through the USDA Agricultural Research Service (grant no. 58-1907-0-041). For the years 2004-2007 this work was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) PGI grant award #0321685. Current work is being supported by the NSF Plant Genome Research Resource grant award #0703908.
The name Gramene is a play on Gramineae, a synonym for "Poaceae," the grass family as well as on the name of the Grameen Bank which specializes in small loans to the poor (mostly women) in emerging economies. In 2006, Muhammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank, won a Nobel Prize for "efforts to create economic and social development from below."
- Lincoln Stein (PI)
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
- lstein@cshl.edu
- Susan McCouch (Co-PI)
- Cornell University
- srm4@cornell.edu
- Edward Buckler (Co-PI)
- Institute for Genomic Diversity, Cornell University
- esb33@cornell.edu
- Doreen Ware (Co-PI)
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
- ware@cshl.edu
- Pankaj Jaiswal (Co-PI)
- Cornell University
- jaiswalp@science.oregonstate.edu
- Other Personnel
Copyright © 2000-2008 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and Cornell University, USA.
The purpose of Gramene is to work in collaboration with others on database software and planning, and to integrate contributions from researchers with publicly available genomic data to make a comprehensive cereal genomic and comparative resource available to the scientific community. The information and software used in the development and building of the Gramene database and web site is available from various sources within the public domain. Permission for reproduction has been given or implied by the researchers/institutes who contributed or published the original materials. However, there may be patents, copyrights or intellectual property rights associated with the original data, and users of the Gramene database contents are solely responsible for compliance with original restrictions and acknowledgement requirements when using original data.
Citing Gramene Data
The Gramene database is freely available for download and use as long as Gramene is cited as the source. This includes the tools available at Gramene including but not limited to RiceCyc, CMap Viewer, Gramene Mart and the Genome Browser. When using Gramene or the information derived from Gramene kindly acknowledge the Gramene project by citing the web address http://www.gramene.org/ and identifying the version of Gramene being used (identified on the Home page) and the date accessed.For information on linking directly to particular data items, see this document.
Publications: Citing the Gramene Project:
When citing the Gramene project for other purposes, please refer to any one of the following papers:
- Liang C, Jaiswal P, Hebbard C, Avraham S, Buckler ES, Casstevens T, Hurwitz B, McCouch S, Ni J, Pujar A, Ravenscroft D, Ren L, Spooner W, Tecle I, Thomason J, Tung CW, Wei X, Yap I, Youens-Clark K, Ware D, Stein L. Gramene: a growing plant comparative genomics resource. Nucleic Acids Research, 2007 Nov 4; [Epub ahead of print] PMID: 17984077 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]. (Gramene Reference ID 11653)
- Jaiswal P, Ni J, Yap I, Ware D, Spooner W, Youens-Clark K, Ren L, Liang C, Zhao W, Ratnapu K, Faga B, Canaran P, Fogleman M, Hebbard C, Avraham S, Schmidt S, Casstevens TM, Buckler ES, Stein L, McCouch S (2006)Gramene: a bird's eye view of cereal genomes. Nucleic Acids Research, 34: D717-723. (Gramene Reference ID 11021)
- Ware D, Jaiswal P, Ni J, Pan X, Chang K, Clark K, Teytelman L, Schmidt S, Zhao W, Cartinhour S, McCouch S, Stein L (2002) Gramene: a resource for comparative grass genomics. Nucleic Acids Research, 30, 103-105. (Gramene Reference ID 6446)
- Ware DH, Jaiswal P, Ni J, Yap IV, Pan X, Clark KY, Teytelman L, Schmidt SC, Zhao W, Chang K, Cartinhour S, Stein LD, McCouch SR (2002) Gramene, a tool for grass genomics. Plant Physiol 130: 1606-1613. (Gramene Reference ID 7071)
Citing Ontologies at Gramene:
- Jaiswal P, Ware D, Ni J, Chang K, Zhao W, Schmidt S, Pan X, Clark K, Teytelman L, Cartinhour S, Stein L, McCouch S (2002) Gramene: development and integration of trait and gene ontologies for rice. Comparative and Functional Genomics 3: 132-136. (Gramene Reference ID 6902)
- Yamazaki Y, Jaiswal P (2005) Biological ontologies in rice databases. An introduction to the activities in Gramene and Oryzabase. Plant Cell Physiol 46: 63-68. Epub 2005 Jan 2019. (Gramene Reference ID 9505)
Other Publications
*End Note users - Download Gramene Citations
- Gramene: A Genomics and Genetics Resources for Maize.
Maize Genetics Cooperation Newsletter, Volume 80, 2006.
[Full article] or [PDF Newsletter, pp 99-107]
- Gramene: A genomics and genetics resource for rice.
Rice Genetics Newsletter, 2005, Vol. 22, No. 1. 9-16.
Apart from our in-house and/or community wide quality measures that are in place, we request that users who notice inaccurate or missing data to please offer Feedback and inform us so that it can be corrected in a future version.
The following employment opportunities are available at Gramene:
Cold Spring Harbor laboratory is seeking talented and motivated individuals for current and future job opening as postdoctoral fellows and software developers in the expanding bioinformatics program at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. An ideal candidate will have an interdisciplinary training with strong computational science background and biology knowledge. The successful candidates will develop a strong bioinformatics research program, collaborate with a diverse research community and contribute to an emerging community resource (www.gramene.org). Applicants should have a Ph.D. (or equivalent degree) in biology, bioinformatics, molecular biology, biochemistry, genetics, evolutionary or systematic biology, or related fields, and demonstrated experience in computer science and expertise in at least one scientific programming language and relational data management system. Experience in network analysis methods, and in the analysis of signaling processes and networks using engineering or applied mathematics approaches are strongly desired. Will consider M.S. with very good relevant experience. For more information on the projects please see the following links. .For other job opportunities, please contact the PIs.
https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=0333074,
https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=0321666,
https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=0321467Interested individuals should send or email curriculum vitae with names of three references and a brief description of previous experience and accomplishments to:
Doreen Ware, Ph.D., USDA ARS Research Scientist, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1 Bungtown Rd., Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724, E-mail: ware@cshl.edu
Last modified: Wed Apr 1 17:30:52 2009