Barley Pangenome v2 is released

[Posted on November 13, 2024]

76 genome assemblies and annotations were released today as part of the Barley Pangenome v2. The link for the Nature Paper is here.

In collaboration with IPK, GrainGenes created genome browsers and BLAST databases for each assembly.

LINKS IN GRAINGENES
GrainGenes news update (contains links and some info)
GrainGenes genome browsers landing page
GrainGenes BLAST page

CROSS-LINKS BETWEEN GRAINGENES AND PANBARLEX
In addition, GrainGenes and PanBARLEX collaborated to create links between two biological resources to provide seamless experience to users. The links allow users to access orthogroups and other types of information for specific genes at PanBARLEX. To access these links, please click on the gene of your interest, and follow the link to PanBARLEX.

Some examples:
https://panbarlex.ipk-gatersleben.de/#gene/HORVU.BARKE.PROJ.2HG00167790
https://wheat.pw.usda.gov/ggapi/idsearch/HORVU.BARKE.PROJ.2HG00167790?au...
https://wheat.pw.usda.gov/jb/?data=/ggds/barpg2-barke&loc=HORVU.BARKE.PR...

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The following was released as a news item accompanying the Nature article:

IPK-led research team provides insights into the pangenome of barley
Gatersleben, 13.11.2024 Pangenomes are collections of annotated genome sequences of multiple individuals of a species. The structural variants uncovered by these datasets are a major asset to genetic analysis in crop plants. An international research team led by the IPK Leibniz Institute reports a pangenome of barley comprising long-read sequence assemblies of 76 wild and domesticated genomes and short-read sequence data of 1,315 genotypes. An expanded catalogue of sequence variation in the crop includes structurally complex loci that are rich in gene copy number variation and that control certain traits. Today, the results were published in the journal “Nature”.

Reliable crop yields fueled the rise of human civilizations. As people embraced a new way of life, cultivated plants, too, had to adapt to the needs of their domesticators. There are different adaptive requirements in a wild compared to an arable habitat. Crop plants and their wild progenitors differ, for example, in how many vegetative branches they initiate or how many seeds or fruits they produce and when.

A common concern among crop conservationists is dangerously reduced genetic diversity in cultivated plants. But crop evolution needs not be a unidirectional loss of diversity. “Our panel of 1,000 plant genetic resources and 315 elite varieties allowed us to compare pangenome complexity in the crop and its wild progenitor”, explains Dr. Murukarthick Jayakodi, joint first author of the study. “And we have shown that valuable diversity can arise after domestication.”

The recently published human draft pangenome demonstrated how contiguous long-read sequences help make sense of reams of sequence data. This current study on the barley pangenome sheds light on crop evolution and breeding. The shortcomings of previous short-read assemblies made it all but impossible to see patterns that now emerge from their long-read counterparts. “We were able for the first time to study the evolution of structurally complex loci and detected 173 of them with nearly identical tandem repeats and genes”, explains Dr. Martin Mascher, head of IPK’s research group “Domestication Genomics”.

To demonstrate the utility of the pangenome, the researchers focused on a few loci - Mla, HvTB1, amy1_1, HvSRH1 - and the traits they control: disease resistance, plant architecture, starch mobilization and the hairiness of a rudimentary appendage to the grain. And taking a broader view of the environment as a set of exogeneous factors that drive natural selection, barley provides a fascinating, and economically important example.

The process of malting involves the sprouting of moist barley grains, driving the release of enzymes that break down starch into fermentable sugars. Only the long-read based high-quality pangenome revealed the copy-number differences and haplotype diversity of the starch-degrading alpha-amylase1_1 family of genes and makes this information accessible to breeding. “Novel allelic variation is illustrative of the power of pangenomics”, emphasises Prof. Dr. Nils Stein, head of IPK’s department “Genebank”. “Our findings indicate that much of the allelic diversity we see at structurally complex loci in the pangenome may have helped crop plants adapt to new selective regimes in agricultural ecosystems.”