Publications Papers De novo annotation reveals transcriptomic complexity across the hexaploid wheat pan-genome

De novo annotation reveals transcriptomic complexity across the hexaploid wheat pan-genome

NASUDA Shuhei

Oct. 9, 2025

Abstract
Wheat is the most widely cultivated crop in the world, with over 215 million hectares grown annually. The 10+ Wheat Genomes Project recently sequenced and assembled to chromosome-level the genomes of nine wheat cultivars, uncovering genetic diversity and selection within the pan-genome of wheat. Here, we provide a wheat pan-transcriptome with de novo annotation and differential expression analysis for these wheat cultivars across multiple tissues. Using the de novo annotations we identify cultivar-specific genes and define the core and dispensable genomes. Expression analysis across cultivars and tissues reveals conservation in expression between a large core set of homeologous genes, in addition to widespread changes in subgenome homeolog expression bias between cultivars and cultivar-specific expression profiles. We utilise both the newly constructed gene-based wheat pan-genome and pan-transcriptome, demonstrating variation in the prolamin superfamily and immune-reactive proteins across cultivars.

Anthony Hall, Anthony Hall, Benjamen White, Rachel Rusholme-Pilcher, Susan Duncan, Hannah Rees, Jonathan Wright, Ryan Joynson, Joshua Colmer, Benedict Coombes, Naomi Irish, Suzanne Henderson, Karim Gharbi, Leah Catchpole, Tom Barker, Wilfried Haerty, Gemy Kaithakottil, David Swarbreck, James Simmonds, Cristobal Uauy, Philippa Borrill, Thomas Lux, Heidrun Gundlach, Klaus Mayer, Manuel Spannagl, Helen Chapman, Angela Juhasz, Moeko Okada, Hirokazu Handa, Shuhei Nasuda, Kentaro Shimizu, Daniel Lang, Guy Naamati, Sabrina Ward, Erik Legg, Arvind Bharti, Michelle Colgrave, Jesse Poland, Simon Krattinger, Nils Stein, Curtis Pozniak, Utpal Bose, and 10 plus Wheat genome project

Nature Communications (16) 8538

doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-64046-1

Author

NASUDA Shuhei

  • Professor
  • Nasuda Group
  • Kyoto University
  • Environmental Responses
  • Genome Flexibility
  • Reproductive Development
  • Imaging
  • Field science