-omics

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The English-language neologism omics informally refers to a field of study in biology ending in the suffix -omics, such as genomics or proteomics. The related neologism omes addresses the objects of study of such fields, such as the genome or proteome respectively. Users of the suffix “-om-” frequently take it as referring to totality of some sort.

Contents

Origin

The suffix “-om-” originated as a back-formation from “genome”, a word formed in analogy with “chromosome”.[1] The word “chromosome” comes from the Greek stems “χρωμ(ατ)-” (colour) and “σωμ(ατ)-” (body).[1]. Because “genome” refers to the complete genetic makeup of an organism, some people have made the inference that there exists some root, *“-ome-”, of Greek origin referring to wholeness or to completion, but such root is unknown to most or all scholars.[2].

Because of the success of large-scale genome sequencing, the suffix "-om-" has been picked up by a wide array of other large-scale quantitative biology fields.

Early adopters of "omes"

Bioinformaticians and molecular biologists figured amongst the first scientists to start to apply the "-ome" suffix widely. Some early advocates were bioinformaticians in Cambridge, UK, where there were many early bioinformatics labs such as the MRC centre, Sanger centre, and EBI (European Bioinformatics Institute). For example, the MRC centre is where the first genome and proteome projects were carried out.

Acceptance

Many “omes” beyond the original “genome” have become useful and have been widely adopted by research scientists. “Proteomics” has become well-established as a term for studying proteins at a large scale. "Omes" can provide an easy short-hand to encapsulate a field; for example, an interactomics study is clearly recognisable as relating to large-scale analyses of gene-gene, protein-protein, or protein-ligand interactions. Researchers are rapidly taking up omes and omics, as shown by the explosion of the use of these terms in PubMed since the mid '90s[3].

Established "omes"

Newer "omics" and "omes"

  • Receptorome: The portion of the genome encoding receptors
  • Kinome: The totality of protein kinases in a cell. Kinomics: The study of the kinome.
  • Physiome: Related to physiology. Physiomics: The associated field of study.
  • Neurome: The complete neural makeup of an organism. A word which a neurobiologist might utter in the future. Neuromics: The study of the neurome.
    • Note: Neurome[9] and Neuromics[10] are now the names of Biotech companies. The term 'Neurome' has been used by NeuronBank.org[11], which is an attempt to develop an approach to catalog the Neurome.
  • Cytome: The cellular composition of a tissue. This term is associated to cell sorting techniques.
  • Predictome: A complete set of predictions.[12]
  • Reactome: A knowledge base of biological processes.[13]
  • Connectome: The connections between neurons. A Technicolour Approach to the Connectome (Nature)

Unrelated -omics

The word “comic” does not use the "omics" suffix; it derives from Greek “κωμ(ο)-” (merriment) + “-ικ(ο)-” (an adjectival suffix), rather than presenting a truncation of “σωμ(ατ)-”.

Similarly, the word “economy” is assembled from Greek “οικ(ο)-” (household) + “νομ(ο)-” (law or custom), and “economic(s)” from “οικ(ο)-” + “νομ(ο)-” + “-ικ(ο)-”. The suffix -omics is sometimes used to create portmanteau words to refer to schools of economics such as Reaganomics.

References

  1. ^ a b Coleridge, H.; et alii. The Oxford English Dictionary
  2. ^ Liddell,, H.G.; Scott, R.; et alii. A Greek-English Lexicon [1996]. (Search at Perseus Project.)
  3. ^ Omes Table, Gerstein Lab
  4. ^ Wild CP (2005). "Complementing the genome with an "exposome": the outstanding challenge of environmental exposure measurement in molecular epidemiology". Cancer Epidemiol. Biomarkers Prev. 14 (8): 1847–50. doi:10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-05-0456. PMID 16103423. 

See also

External links

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 23 August 2008, at 13:53.

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