Abstract

AbstractWheat genome sequencing has passed through major steps in a decade, starting from the sequencing of large contiguous sequences obtained from chromosome-specific BAC libraries, to reach high-quality genome assemblies of a dozen of bread wheat varieties and wild relatives. While access to an assembled genome sequence is crucial for research, the resource that is mainly used by the community is not the sequence itself, but rather the annotated features, i.e., genes and transposable elements. In this chapter, we describe the work performed to predict the repertoire of 107 k high-confidence genes and 4 million TE copies in the hexaploid wheat genome (cultivar CHINESE SPRING; IWGSC RefSeq) and the procedures established to transfer the annotation through the different releases of genome assembly. Limitations and implications for building a wheat pangenome are discussed, as well as the possibilities for future improvements of structural annotation, and opportunities offered by novel approaches for functional annotation.

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