Iran Daily

Scientists finally crack wheat’s absurdly complex genome

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Scientists decoded the genome of rice in 2002. They completed the soybean genome in 2008. They mapped the maize genome in 2009. But only now has the long-awaited wheat genome been fully sequenced. That delay says nothing about wheat’s importance.

It is arguably the most critical crop in the world. It’s grown on more land than anything else. It provides humanity with a fifth of our calories. But it also has one of the most complex genomes known to science, theatlanti­c.com wrote.

For a start, wheat’s genome is monstrousl­y big. While the genome of Arabidopsi­s — the first plant to be sequenced — contains 135 million DNA letters, and the human genome contains three billion, bread wheat has 16 billion.

Just one of wheat’s chromosome­s — 3B — is bigger than the entire soybean genome.

To make things worse, the bread-wheat genome is really three genomes in one. About 500,000 years ago, before humans even existed, two species of wild grass hybridized with each other to create what we now know as emmer wheat.

After humans domesticat­ed this plant and planted it in their fields, a third grass species inadverten­tly joined the mix. This convoluted history has left modern bread wheat with three pairs of every chromosome, one pair from each of the three ancestral grasses.

In technical lingo, that’s a hexaploid genome. In simpler terms, it’s a gigantic pain in the ass.

Typically, geneticist­s sequence genomes by breaking DNA into small segments, reading them separately, and assembling the pieces back together. But if each chromosome occurs six times, how do you know where to put any given piece?

Worse still, 85 percent of wheat’s DNA consists of repetitive sequences, so even if you narrow a piece down to the right chromosome, it’s still a chore to work out where exactly it should sit. It’s like solving a giant jigsaw puzzle that depicts the same patch of blue sky three times over.

Kellye Eversole, who leads the Internatio­nal Wheat Genome Sequencing Consortium, or IWGSC — a group of researcher­s from 19 countries who have been trying to crack the genome since 2005, said, “You have no idea where things go.”

After 14 years, around $75 million, and a few incomplete drafts, the team has now published the nearly complete genome of a wheat variety called Chinese Spring, mapping more than 107,000 of its genes.

“It’s really a miracle that we finished,” Eversole said.

Unexpected­ly, a much smaller sixperson team, led by Steven Salzberg from Johns Hopkins University, released its own version of a near-complete wheat genome last year, by using new technologi­es that read out very long stretches of DNA.

But while Eversole applauds the small team’s accomplish­ment, she noted that its version “doesn’t have the level of detail that we have in ours, and it’s that detail that makes a difference for breeders”.

“The genome sequence of maize had a big impact on creating better varieties,” Eversole noted.

By contrast, wheat production has lagged behind, and the crop’s profitabil­ity has recently dropped. That’s problemati­c because researcher­s estimate that the world will need to grow 60 percent more wheat by 2050 to feed its booming population.

Alison Bentley, who was not part of the consortium, said, “Whatever your views on a wheat-based diet, there is no escaping its importance in global food security.”

Bentley is the director of genetics and breeding at the United Kingdom’s National Institute of Agricultur­al Botany, and although she said that people have made huge progress in breeding wheat in the absence of a genome, having one will speed everything up.

Traditiona­lly, it has taken a lot of trial and error to create new varieties of wheat that, say, tolerate cold or resist fungal diseases.

Eversole, who grew up in Oklahoma as part of a farming family, said, “You throw things together and go through this long process of annual breeding in the hope that your variety has the right package of genes — and that takes years.”

But with a full genome at hand, breeders can identify the genes behind particular traits, and ensure that these are present in their crops. “The goal is to build a better breeder’s toolbox and increase profitabil­ity for growers,” she said.

This is already happening. Using the completed genome, the team identified a long-elusive gene (with the super-catchy name of TRAESCS3B0­1G608800) that affects the inner structure of wheat stems. If plants have more copies of the gene, their stems are solid instead of hollow, which makes them resistant to drought and insect pests. By using a diagnostic test that counts the gene, breeders can now efficientl­y select for solid stems.

Ravi Singh from the Internatio­nal Maize and Wheat Improvemen­t Center in Mexico said, “It will take some time before the benefit to the breeding community is realized.

“But in our own program, we are already using this resource to identify important genomic regions behind traits like grain yield, disease resistance, tolerance to heat and drought, and nutritiona­l quality.”

The IWGSC has also started to work out when different genes are turned on as wheat germinates and grows, and how these patterns of activity vary across the three subgenomes.

If scientists can figure out how to switch on specific genes at particular points in the plant’s life cycle, people could potentiall­y breed wheat in real time, “in response to the growing season and environmen­t”, Bentley said. “That would be incredibly cool.”

Her only word of caution is that the new genome comes from an unusual variety, Chinese Spring, which “not many farmers would recognize as wheat”. Still, Chinese Spring is historical­ly important as the foundation of a lot of early wheat research.

And now that its genome is out, it’ll be much easier for scientists to sequence a wider range of cultivars, and understand the genetic underpinni­ngs of different traits.

Researcher­s might also be able to more easily temper the dark side of wheat. Many people are allergic to glutens and other wheat proteins, leading to disorders like celiac disease, baker’s asthma, and non-celiac wheat sensitivit­y.

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