Current status of the multinational Arabidopsis community

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • The Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee
  • Geraint Parry
  • Siobhan M. Brady
  • Baris Uzilday
  • Hans Peter Braun

Externe Organisationen

  • Cardiff University
  • University of California at Davis
  • Ege University
  • Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech)
  • University of Toronto
Forschungs-netzwerk anzeigen

Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummere00248
FachzeitschriftPlant Direct
Jahrgang4
Ausgabenummer7
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2 Aug. 2020

Abstract

The multinational Arabidopsis research community is highly collaborative and over the past thirty years these activities have been documented by the Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee (MASC). Here, we (a) highlight recent research advances made with the reference plant Arabidopsis thaliana; (b) provide summaries from recent reports submitted by MASC subcommittees, projects and resources associated with MASC and from MASC country representatives; and (c) initiate a call for ideas and foci for the “fourth decadal roadmap,” which will advise and coordinate the global activities of the Arabidopsis research community.

ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete

Zitieren

Current status of the multinational Arabidopsis community. / The Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee; Parry, Geraint; Brady, Siobhan M. et al.
in: Plant Direct, Jahrgang 4, Nr. 7, e00248, 02.08.2020.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

The Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee, Parry, G, Brady, SM, Uzilday, B & Braun, HP 2020, 'Current status of the multinational Arabidopsis community', Plant Direct, Jg. 4, Nr. 7, e00248. https://doi.org/10.1002/pld3.248, https://doi.org/10.15488/11678
The Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee, Parry, G., Brady, S. M., Uzilday, B., & Braun, H. P. (2020). Current status of the multinational Arabidopsis community. Plant Direct, 4(7), Artikel e00248. https://doi.org/10.1002/pld3.248, https://doi.org/10.15488/11678
The Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee, Parry G, Brady SM, Uzilday B, Braun HP. Current status of the multinational Arabidopsis community. Plant Direct. 2020 Aug 2;4(7):e00248. doi: 10.1002/pld3.248, 10.15488/11678
The Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee ; Parry, Geraint ; Brady, Siobhan M. et al. / Current status of the multinational Arabidopsis community. in: Plant Direct. 2020 ; Jahrgang 4, Nr. 7.
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@article{4edfe462dfd9444da7d03457c72c5190,
title = "Current status of the multinational Arabidopsis community",
abstract = "The multinational Arabidopsis research community is highly collaborative and over the past thirty years these activities have been documented by the Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee (MASC). Here, we (a) highlight recent research advances made with the reference plant Arabidopsis thaliana; (b) provide summaries from recent reports submitted by MASC subcommittees, projects and resources associated with MASC and from MASC country representatives; and (c) initiate a call for ideas and foci for the “fourth decadal roadmap,” which will advise and coordinate the global activities of the Arabidopsis research community.",
keywords = "Arabidopsis thaliana, collaboration, Research Network, roadmap",
author = "{The Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee} and Geraint Parry and Provart, {Nicholas J.} and Brady, {Siobhan M.} and Baris Uzilday and Keith Adams and Wagner Ara{\'u}jo and S{\'e}bastien Aubourg and Sacha Baginsky and Erica Bakker and Katja B{\"a}renfaller and Jacqui Batley and Mike Beale and Mark Beilstein and Youssef Belkhadir and Gregor Mendel and Tanya Berardini and Joy Bergelson and Francisca Blanco-Herrera and Siobhan Brady and Braun, {Hans Peter} and Steve Briggs and Lynette Brownfield and Maura Cardarelli and Marcos Castellanos-Uribe and Gloria Coruzzi and Maheshi Dassanayake and {De Jaeger}, Geert and Brian Dilkes and Colleen Doherty and Joe Ecker and Pat Edger and David Edwards and {El Kasmi}, Farid and Maria Eriksson and Moises Exposito-Alonso and Pascal Falter-Braun and Alisdair Fernie and Myriam Ferro and Oliver Fiehn and Joanna Friesner and Katie Greenham and Yalong Guo and Thorsten Hamann and Angela Hancock and Hauser, {Marie Theres} and Joshua Heazlewood and Ho, {Cheng Hsun} and Hanna H{\~o}rak and Eva Huala and Song Li",
note = "Funding information: Oversight of the Arabidopsis informatics strategy has largely fallen to the International Arabidopsis Informatics Consortium (IAIC), which was funded by the NSF until 2020. In 2018 IAIC hosted a workshop in St Louis and its “take home” recommendation was for the establishment of a centralized “annotation authority” to advise on submissions from groups for new gene names across the Arabidopsis pangenome, to establish a consistent naming scheme, to distribute this format regularly and frequently, and to encourage its adoption (International Arabidopsis Informatics Consortium, 2019 ). This article also recommends community?established guidelines and standards for data and metadata formats alongside a searchable, central repository for analysis and visualization tools (such as https://conf.arabidopsis.org/display/COM/Resources ). Fortunately, the implementation of these recommendations will be facilitated by a closely linked international community and will undoubtedly be a topic discussed for inclusion within the next roadmap. GP is supported by UKRI-BBSRC grant GARNet2020 (BB/M004376/1) SMB is partially funded by an HHMI Faculty Scholar Fellowship. BU acknowledges support of his work by The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (T{\"U}B?TAK) (Grant No: 118Z137). MASC Country representatives provide an opinion on the current status of Arabidopsis research in their countries. It is challenging to obtain a consistent metric for these evaluations as different countries will view their situation from different starting positions. For example, the United Kingdom publishes around 200 Arabidopsis papers per year and there is ~£8M in annual 'Responsive mode' Government funding for “Arabidopsis research” yet this represents a reduction in funding, so the situation is not as healthy as in previous years. However, other countries have low to no funding in research specifically dedicated to Arabidopsis, yet have a positive opinion toward research in this area, for example, “In Brazil even though there is virtually no such funding programs towards Arabidopsis, the number of institutions using Arabidopsis in their research is growing each year. We are seeing a gradual increase in the usage of Arabidopsis as a model plant for molecular and genetic studies due to its power as an easily manipulated model system to investigate gene functions.” Similarly in India, although there is no earmarked financial support for Arabidopsis research from the Government, scientists can compete for grants dedicated for basic science and many projects are regularly funded on Arabidopsis exclusively; “many more projects use Arabidopsis as a system to validate genes from crop plants. Consequently, the overall quality of publications….…has improved considerably.” ",
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T1 - Current status of the multinational Arabidopsis community

AU - The Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee

AU - Parry, Geraint

AU - Provart, Nicholas J.

AU - Brady, Siobhan M.

AU - Uzilday, Baris

AU - Adams, Keith

AU - Araújo, Wagner

AU - Aubourg, Sébastien

AU - Baginsky, Sacha

AU - Bakker, Erica

AU - Bärenfaller, Katja

AU - Batley, Jacqui

AU - Beale, Mike

AU - Beilstein, Mark

AU - Belkhadir, Youssef

AU - Mendel, Gregor

AU - Berardini, Tanya

AU - Bergelson, Joy

AU - Blanco-Herrera, Francisca

AU - Brady, Siobhan

AU - Braun, Hans Peter

AU - Briggs, Steve

AU - Brownfield, Lynette

AU - Cardarelli, Maura

AU - Castellanos-Uribe, Marcos

AU - Coruzzi, Gloria

AU - Dassanayake, Maheshi

AU - De Jaeger, Geert

AU - Dilkes, Brian

AU - Doherty, Colleen

AU - Ecker, Joe

AU - Edger, Pat

AU - Edwards, David

AU - El Kasmi, Farid

AU - Eriksson, Maria

AU - Exposito-Alonso, Moises

AU - Falter-Braun, Pascal

AU - Fernie, Alisdair

AU - Ferro, Myriam

AU - Fiehn, Oliver

AU - Friesner, Joanna

AU - Greenham, Katie

AU - Guo, Yalong

AU - Hamann, Thorsten

AU - Hancock, Angela

AU - Hauser, Marie Theres

AU - Heazlewood, Joshua

AU - Ho, Cheng Hsun

AU - Hõrak, Hanna

AU - Huala, Eva

AU - Li, Song

N1 - Funding information: Oversight of the Arabidopsis informatics strategy has largely fallen to the International Arabidopsis Informatics Consortium (IAIC), which was funded by the NSF until 2020. In 2018 IAIC hosted a workshop in St Louis and its “take home” recommendation was for the establishment of a centralized “annotation authority” to advise on submissions from groups for new gene names across the Arabidopsis pangenome, to establish a consistent naming scheme, to distribute this format regularly and frequently, and to encourage its adoption (International Arabidopsis Informatics Consortium, 2019 ). This article also recommends community?established guidelines and standards for data and metadata formats alongside a searchable, central repository for analysis and visualization tools (such as https://conf.arabidopsis.org/display/COM/Resources ). Fortunately, the implementation of these recommendations will be facilitated by a closely linked international community and will undoubtedly be a topic discussed for inclusion within the next roadmap. GP is supported by UKRI-BBSRC grant GARNet2020 (BB/M004376/1) SMB is partially funded by an HHMI Faculty Scholar Fellowship. BU acknowledges support of his work by The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TÜB?TAK) (Grant No: 118Z137). MASC Country representatives provide an opinion on the current status of Arabidopsis research in their countries. It is challenging to obtain a consistent metric for these evaluations as different countries will view their situation from different starting positions. For example, the United Kingdom publishes around 200 Arabidopsis papers per year and there is ~£8M in annual 'Responsive mode' Government funding for “Arabidopsis research” yet this represents a reduction in funding, so the situation is not as healthy as in previous years. However, other countries have low to no funding in research specifically dedicated to Arabidopsis, yet have a positive opinion toward research in this area, for example, “In Brazil even though there is virtually no such funding programs towards Arabidopsis, the number of institutions using Arabidopsis in their research is growing each year. We are seeing a gradual increase in the usage of Arabidopsis as a model plant for molecular and genetic studies due to its power as an easily manipulated model system to investigate gene functions.” Similarly in India, although there is no earmarked financial support for Arabidopsis research from the Government, scientists can compete for grants dedicated for basic science and many projects are regularly funded on Arabidopsis exclusively; “many more projects use Arabidopsis as a system to validate genes from crop plants. Consequently, the overall quality of publications….…has improved considerably.”

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N2 - The multinational Arabidopsis research community is highly collaborative and over the past thirty years these activities have been documented by the Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee (MASC). Here, we (a) highlight recent research advances made with the reference plant Arabidopsis thaliana; (b) provide summaries from recent reports submitted by MASC subcommittees, projects and resources associated with MASC and from MASC country representatives; and (c) initiate a call for ideas and foci for the “fourth decadal roadmap,” which will advise and coordinate the global activities of the Arabidopsis research community.

AB - The multinational Arabidopsis research community is highly collaborative and over the past thirty years these activities have been documented by the Multinational Arabidopsis Steering Committee (MASC). Here, we (a) highlight recent research advances made with the reference plant Arabidopsis thaliana; (b) provide summaries from recent reports submitted by MASC subcommittees, projects and resources associated with MASC and from MASC country representatives; and (c) initiate a call for ideas and foci for the “fourth decadal roadmap,” which will advise and coordinate the global activities of the Arabidopsis research community.

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