List of omics topics in biology
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This is a navigational and informational list.
The terms 'Ome' and 'Omics' are derivations of the suffix -ome, which has been appended to a variety of previously existing biological terms to create names for fields of endeavor that are either speculative or have some tangible meaning in particular contexts. Some Omics are well established while others are speculative. The scientific community embraces or rejects each new term depending upon their continued usage or avoidance of the term in editorial and peer-reviewed literature. For further discussion of the origins of the various Omics as a group, see -omics.
The list is organized by the number of appearances in the abstract or title of a peer-reviewed publication indexed in PubMed before 2001 (public announcement of the completion of the human genome occurred in June 2000). This is a crude estimate of the prevalence of a term in the biological community as a whole before the recent explosion of -omics terms. In the list, the first term refers to a biological entity, the second to the expansion of the term to cover a set of such objects in a single physiological compartment (typically but not always a single cell), the third to the field of endeavor devoted to the study of the collection of objects and their physical and/or functional interrelations. Finally in parentheses at the end of each line are the number of hits in the PubMed survey.
detail of an example PubMed search: lipomics[Title/Abstract] AND ("1900"[PDAT] : "2001"[PDAT])
More than 100 PubMed hits (1900-2001)
- gene => genome (>60,000) => genomics (>2,000)
- protein => proteome (620) => proteomics (631)
- transcript => transcriptome (117) => transcriptomics (7)
- metabolite => metabolome => metabolomics
- protein interaction => interactome => interactomics
Hits for 2002 to 2005 (Jan 1 to Jan 1)
- genome (~24,000); genomics (3,560)
- proteome (1845); proteomics (2592)
- transcriptome (904); transcriptomics (96)
- Lipid; Lipidome; Lipidomics
From 1 to 100 PubMed hits (1900-2001)
- biological time => chronome (38) => chronomics (3)
- ecology (distinct from ecosystem) => biome (31) => biomics (0)
- metabolism => metabolome => metabolomics (18)
- phenotype => phenome => phenomics (13)
- protein-bound carbohydrate moiety => glycome (3) => glycomics (3; glycobiology received 152 hits)
- interacting biological entities => interactome => interactomics (5; systems biology received 9 hits)
- protein-protein interaction => interactome => interactomics (5)
- cardiac genome => cardiome or cardiogenome => cardiomics or cardiogenomics (4)
- chemical genomics => chemogenome or chemo genome => chemogenomics (4)
- cellular systems => cytome => cytomics (2)
- ecosystem => ecome => ecomics (2)
- reaction => reactome (6) => reactomics (0)
- RNA => RNome => RNomics (2)
- bibliography => bibliome => bibliomics (1)
- cell => cellome => cellomics (1)
- clinical genomics => clinome => clinomics (1)
- flux => fluxome => fluxomics (1)
- gluteome => gluteomics (0)
Hits from 2002 to 2005 (Jan 1 to Jan 1)
- chronome (13), chronomics (15)
- biome (31), biomics (1)
- cytome(7), cytomics (24)
- glycome (22), glycomics (37), glycobiology (85)
No (0) PubMed hits (1900-2001)
- behaviour or behavior => behaviourome or behaviorome => behaviouromics or behavioromics (0)
- carbohydrates => CHOme => CHOmics (0)
- chromosome => chromonome => chromonomics (0)
- ??? => cryptome => cryptomics (0)
- expressed entity => expressome => expressomics (0)
- functional entity => functome => functomics (0)
- kinase (typically protein kinase => kinome => kinomics (0)
- lipid => lipome => lipomics (0)
- molecular complex => complexome => complexomics (0)
- protein crystals => crystallome => crystalomics (0)
- regulation => regulome => regulomics (0)
- taxonomy => taxome => taxomics (0)
- text => textome => textomics (0)
- women => shenome => shenomics (0)
References
- -Omes and -omics glossary. Cambridge Healthtech Institute. (retrieved 2005-02-16)
- Omes Table — a list of -omes and -omics and what they mean. (retrieved 2007-03-17)
Acknowledgement and Attribution Regarding Sources of Content
Some of the initial content on this page may be incorporated in part from copyleft sources in the public domain including wikis such as Wikipedia and AskDrWiki. Drug information for patients came from the The National Library of Medicine. Infectious disease information may have come from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Differential Diagnoses are drawn from clinicians as well as an amalgamation of 3 sources: 1.The Disease Database; 2. Kahan, Scott, Smith, Ellen G. In A Page: Signs and Symptoms. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing, 2004:3; 3. Sailer, Christian, Wasner, Susanne. Differential Diagnosis Pocket. Hermosa Beach, CA: Borm Bruckmeir Publishing LLC, 2002:7 .

