James and the Giant Corn Genetics: Studying the Source Code of Nature

August 27, 2010

Wheat Genome Draft Sequence

Filed under: Uncategorized — James @ 9:03 am

The wheat genome is the Mt. Everest of plant genomics. Remember this chart I used to show how small the peach genome was?

Amount of sequence (DNA) found in a selection of sequenced plant genomes.

Corn is the single biggest value on that graph. Now let’s add on wheat.

Plus wheat

On top of the total size of the wheat genome, further difficulties come from the fact that wheat genome is actually made up of three overlapping and similar genomes (The A, B and D genomes of wheat), making it very difficult to piece together which bits of DNA sequence belong to which genome. As I said back when the brachypodium genome was published:

Wheat stands alone as a genome so complex the very thought of trying to assemble it makes grown bioinformaticians cry (I’m obviously taking some dramatic license here).

Yet I woke up this morning to read the headline “British researchers announce a draft of the complex wheat genome.” I was half-way through a mad dash out my door to race into lab and start the standard awesome genome analyses I get to run whenever a new genome comes out. But then, a frightening thought occurred to me. “What if this is another woodland strawberry genome?*”

Time to dig into the real scientific information behind the flurry of news stories this morning. The website currently serving up the wheat genome is located here. And unlike the press coverage, they’re completely open about the data they’re making available. 5-fold coverage of the wheat genome using 454 sequencing reads. That translates into a ~64 gigabases of DNA (or at 28 gigabyte compressed file), all in short pieces with no idea where the individual pieces go.

Wheat grains. Public domain image from the USDA via wikipedia.

Piecing a genome together is hard. By releasing the raw sequencing reads, rather than an assembled sequence, the groups behind the wheat genome accomplished two big things. They were able to release a “draft genome” much faster and, at the same time, they’ve ensured no one else can do the sort of whole genome analysis that genome groups often seem worried will result in their own results getting scooped. The downside is that they’ve also ensured people like me have no way to assess how useful the sequence will be for our own research.**

Five-fold coverage with 454 reads seems pretty low for a genome as complex and difficult to assemble as the wheat genome, but I can’t judge how much it will impact their ability to assemble a complete genome sequence until I see the assembly itself. The clickthrough page to download the sequencing reads says the research group currently plans to complete their analysis by next April, with publication coming sometime before April 2012. So sometime in the next year and a half, I hope to be back with something real to say about the wheat genome sequence.

UPDATE: Greg over at Pie-ence has coverage of the wheat genome story too.

UPDATE 2: Read how the International Wheat Genome Sequencing Consortium and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council in the UK both describe this release of data more accurately.

*For those of you who don’t know about the woodland strawberry genome, at the last PAG meeting, a research gave a talk about the in progress sequencing of the strawberry genome. This was picked up by a reporter as a story announcing the release of a complete strawberry genome sequence, and the story flashed around the web (including to my own site), before it could be corrected.

**Which I’m sure is not a big downside to the people sequencing the genome, but is a big one for me, and enough to make me change my mind about rushing into work early this morning.

7 Comments »

  1. […] Wheat Genome Draft Sequence […]

    Pingback by HUGE wheat genome (Mary or Trey) | The OpenHelix Blog — August 27, 2010 @ 11:18 am

  2. […] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Luigi Guarino, James, Shrikant Mantri, AgBlogFeed, K Mueller and others. K Mueller said: good take on why the wheat sequences are a big deal – http://www.jamesandthegiantcorn.com/2010/08/27/wheat-genome-draft-sequence/ […]

    Pingback by Tweets that mention Wheat Genome Draft Sequence – James and the Giant Corn -- Topsy.com — August 30, 2010 @ 12:04 am

  3. […] and the Giant Corn gives you the straight dope on the wheat genome … so we don’t have to. Thanks. Cancel […]

    Pingback by Nibbles: Irish Seedsavers, Australia, Trees, Wheat genome — August 30, 2010 @ 12:36 am

  4. This really irritates me. There is an international consortium called the International Genome Sequencing Consortium ( http://www.wheatgenome.org ), which is trying to sequence in a more rational way this kind of genomic monster. They assigned each of the wheat chromosomes to a country and each nation is now doing the physical mapping and the sequencing of the chromosome. In some cases, they even sequence each arm of the chromosome separately. There is no other way to approach to this huge and complex genome. This group has managed to hit the headlines by releasing useless data. You did a very good job by telling the real truth about this news.

    Comment by Moreno — August 30, 2010 @ 1:28 am

  5. Hi Moreno. I thought I remembered hearing that there was a project underway to sequence individual wheat chromosomes (using some pretty cool technology to separate the chromosomes out as I recall). Thank you for the link. Completely agree that a chromosome by chromosome approach is a lot more likely to result in a well assembled genome that will be of much greater use to researchers and breeders.

    Comment by James — August 30, 2010 @ 7:53 am

  6. […] adatte, ignorano i dettagli tecnici. I commentatori preparati, però, hanno immediatamente notato che dietro la grande notizia si nasconde in realtà un risultato scientifico non altrettanto […]

    Pingback by Svelato il genoma del frumento. O forse no? « my GenomiX — August 30, 2010 @ 12:33 pm

  7. […] Kansas State Perhaps also COGE for conserved sequences edited to add: CerealsDB and James’ post on the wheat draft sequence might give some insight into that huge genome. *Another student asked about dotplot tools: Galaxy […]

    Pingback by World tour of workshops, recent stop: Morocco, Africa | The OpenHelix Blog — November 17, 2011 @ 10:09 am

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