GO Slim and Subset Guide

What is a GO Slim?

GO slims are cut-down versions of the GO ontologies containing a subset of the terms in the whole GO. They give a broad overview of the ontology content without the detail of the specific fine grained terms.

GO slims are particularly useful for giving a summary of the results of GO annotation of a genome, microarray, or cDNA collection when broad classification of gene product function is required. See the map2slim.pl section for a perl implementation of this.

GO slims are created by users according to their needs, and may be specific to species or to particular areas of the ontologies. GO provides a generic GO slim which, like the GO itself, is not species specific, and which should be suitable for most purposes. Alternatively, users can create their own GO slims or use one of the model organism-specific slims integrated into the GO flat file. Please email the GO helpdesk for more information about creating and submitting your GO slim.

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GO Slims Available

Maintained GO slims

The GO slims in this list are maintained as part of the GO flat file. The files available below for download are generated by script from that file.

Maintained GO slims for download
Organism or Usage Download
Generic GO slim
Developed by GO Consortium
OBO format
Plant slim
Developed by The Arabidopsis Information Resource
OBO format
Candida albicans
Developed by Candida Genome Database
OBO format
Protein Information Resource slim
Developed by Darren Natale of PIR
OBO format
Schizosaccharomyces pombe slim
Developed by Val Wood
OBO format
Yeast slim
Developed by Saccharomyces Genome Database
OBO format
Aspergillus slim
Developed by Aspergillus Genome Data base
OBO format
Metagenomics slim
Developed by Jane Lomax and theInterPro group
OBO format

Archived GO Slims

There is also an archive of deprecated GO slims that are no longer maintained or updated. These files have be deposited for two reasons; the first is to give easy access to the GO slim used in a particular publication or analysis; the second is for reuse by others in the community.

All archival GO slims are in the deprecated GO flat file format, which can be converted into OBO format using the the obo2flat script, part of the OBO-Edit package; instructions on usage are provided in the OBO-Edit User Guide.

Users should note that the majority of these GO slims are no longer maintained by the authors, and they may contain GO terms which are now obsolete.

Archived GO slims for download
Topic / Usage Information Download
Generic GO slim Suparna Mundodi and Amelia Ireland
Aug 2002
old GO format
Honey bee ESTs C.W. Whitfield, M.R. Band, M.F. Bonaldo, C.G. Kumar, L. Liu, J.R. Pardinas, H.M. Robertson, M.B. Soares, G.E. Robinson. [PubMed Abstract]
Apr 2002
old GO format
Drosophila M. Adams, M. Ashburner, G.M. Rubin, S.E. Lewis et al.; Adams et al. [PubMed Abstract]
Feb 2000
old GO format
Glossina ESTs M. Berriman
Sep 2002
old GO format
UniProtKB-GOA N. Mulder, M. Pruess [PubMed Abstract]
Nov 2002
old GO format
Mouse The RIKEN Genome Exploration Group Phase II Team and the FANTOM Consortium [PubMed Abstract]
Feb 2001
old GO format
P. falciparum M. Berriman
July 2002
old GO format
Plant Suparna Mundodi
Dec 2002
old GO format
Rice (Beijing) J. Yu et al. [PubMed Abstract]
Apr 2002
old GO format
Rice (Syngenta) J. Yu et al. [PubMed Abstract]
Apr 2002
old GO format
Yeast SGD curators
Aug 2003
old GO format

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map2slim.pl

The map2slim.pl script, distributed as part of the go-perl package, maps a set of annotations up to their parent GO slim terms. Further documentation, installation help and instructions on running the script are available from the go-perl page at CPAN. A web version is available from AmiGO.

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Prokaryotic subset

In addition to GO slims, GO also provides a prokaryote-specific subset of GO terms. This subset contains only terms that are applicable to prokaryotes, so for example, the terms nucleus and mitochondrion are excluded from the subset while the terms membrane and cytoplasm are included. At approximately 7000 terms, the set is much larger than the GO slims and it is intended to be used as a viewing tool for reducing the complexity of the ontologies for those users not interested in viewing eukaryotic terms, rather than to get a high-level view of an annotation set in the way that GO slims are used.

Unlike GO slims, the prokaryotic subset is not generated as a separate file, but is stored as a category in the GO ontology file. It is possible to view the terms in this subset using a filter in OBO-Edit (see the OBO-Edit user guide for instructions).

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