| November 28,09:00-12:15 | Topic 1: Mapping Plant Resilience |
| 09:00-09:30 |
Rhizoid formation in Marchantia at criticality Marta Iba?es University of Barcelona |
| 09:30-10:00 |
Cell-type diversity and specialized functions of the phloem Jiyun Kim Sungkyunkwan University |
| 10:30-11:00 |
Fabalus resilience: Spatial Hormonal Networks in Legume Root Development Wouter Kohlen Wageningen University |
| 11:00-11:30 |
Single-cell and spatial transcriptomics reveals a stereoscopic response of rice tissues to fungal pathogen infection Jun Liu China Agricultural University |
| 11:30-12:15 |
Panel discussion |
| November 28,14:00-17:15 | Topic 2: Unlocking Plant Resilience |
| 14:00-14:30 |
Harnessing microbiome in soil-plant continuum Yong-Guan Zhu Research Center for Eco?Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences |
| 14:30-15:00 |
Environmental DNA (eDNA) studies of terrestrial ecosystems in Western Australia: Past, present, and future Paul Nevill Curtin University |
| 15:30-16:00 |
Plant resilience and climate adaptation through a genomics lens Margaret Byrne The University of Western Australia |
| 16:00-16:30 |
Harnessing the power of genetics to restore resilient ecosystems Peter Harrison EcoAdapt Consulting |
| 16:30-17:15 |
Panel discussion |
| November 28,08:45-10:00 | Workshop 1: Single-cell Multi-omics Toward Understanding Plant Functions and Phenotypes |
| 08:45-09:00 |
The cytogenomic analysis reveals the dynamic topology of synaptonemal complex during maize meiosis Yan He Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences |
| 09:00-09:15 |
In-depth guard cell proteomics and phosphoproteomics Pengcheng Wang Southern University of Science and Technology |
| 09:15-09:30 |
Melatonin: a priming phytohormone beyond the circadian rhythm in plant stomatal immunity Yangyang Li Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences |
| 09:30-09:45 |
Leaf senescence: a perspective at single-cell level Wei Yan Southern University of Science and Technology |
| 09:45-10:00 |
Novel Methods for Multi-Omics Analysis of Single Cells via Selective Enrichment and LC-MS/MS Huiming Yuan Guangzhou Institutes of Biomedicine and Health, Chinese Academy of Sciences |
| November 28,10:30-12:15 | Workshop 2: Spatial Omics for wheat and beyond |
| 10:30-10:45 |
Current Progress and Future Perspective in Wheat Spatial Omics Zhong-Hua Chen The University of Adelaide |
| 10:45-11:00 |
Dissection of quantitative traits and candidate genes identification in wheat Shubing Liu Shandong Agricultural University |
| 11:00-11:15 |
Spatial transcriptomics reveals key regions controlling spikelet architecture in developing wheat spikes Scott Boden The University of Adelaide |
| 11:15-11:30 |
Metagenome-Derived Beneficial Microbes that Enhance Wheat Growth in Rainfed Cropping Systems Yi Zhou The University of Adelaide |
| 11:30-11:45 |
Regional-Specific Responses of Wheat Adventitious Roots to Waterlogging Stress Lingzhen Ye Zhejiang University |
| 11:45-12:00 |
Heat shock factor TaHSFA6e interacts with TaNAC019 to activate TaHSP70 expression and positively contributes to salt stress in wheat Weiwei Guo Qingdao Agricultural University |
| 12:00-12:15 |
Discovery of Powdery Mildew Resistance Genes and Germplasm Innovation in Wild Emmer Wheat Keyu Zhu Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences |
| November 28,14:00-16:30 | Workshop 3: The Full Stack of Stereo-seq: From Technology to Discovery |
| 14:00-14:20 |
Pushing Spatial Omics to New Frontiers: Stereo-seq at Nanoscale Resolution Ao Chen State Key Laboratory of Genome and Multi-omics Technologies, BGI Research |
| 14:20-14:40 |
DCS Cloud Empowers Single-cell & STOmics Scientific Research Yong Zhang State Key Laboratory of Genome and Multi-omics Technologies, BGI Research |
| 14:40-15:00 |
Single-nucleus and spatial transcriptomics reveal the cell populations of intercalary meristems in bamboo Hansheng Zhao International Centre for Bamboo and Rattan |
| 15:30-15:50 |
Research on Spatiotemporal Single-Cell Omics Algorithms and Cell Foundation Models Shuangsang Fang State Key Laboratory of Genome and Multi-omics Technologies, BGI Research |
| 15:50-16:10 |
STOmicsDB : Standards for SpatioTemporal Omics Data Xiaofeng Wei State Key Laboratory of Genome and Multi-omics Technologies, BGI Research |
| 16:10-16:30 |
SpotGF: Denoising spatially resolved transcriptomics data using an optimal transport-based gene filtering algorithm Hai-Xi Sun State Key Laboratory of Genome and Multi-omics Technologies,BGI Research |
| November 29, 08:30-09:30 | Remarks and Big Science Project Launch Ceremony |
| 08:30-08:40 |
Remarks |
| 08:40-09:10 |
STOC Plant Annual Report: Consortium Progress and STOmics Technology Updates Xun Xu |
| 09:10-09:15 |
Launch Ceremony of Wheat Spatialtemporal Atlas Project |
| 09:15-09:30 |
Group Photo |
| November 29,09:30-10:30 | Keynote |
| 09:30-10:00 |
Decoding Genomes, Driving Impact: Translational Genomics for Climate-Resilient and Sustainable Agriculture Rajeev Varshney Murdoch University |
| 10:00-10:30 |
Gene selection during soybean global dissemination and improvement Zhixi Tian Yazhouwan National Laboratory |
| November 29,10:50-12:10 | Session 3: Plant Spatiotemporal Omics: Tools and Algorithms |
| 10:50-11:10 |
Neuroinflammation and cancer-immune cells at single-cell resolution and within spatial morphological tissue context Quan Nguyen The University of Queensland |
| 11:10-11:30 |
Spatially resolved mapping of cells associated with human complex traits Jian Yang Westlake University |
| 11:30-11:50 |
Gene program-based annotation of high-density spatial transcriptomes Shisong Ma University of Science and Technology of China |
| 11:50-12:10 |
Single-nucleus Transcriptomics Reveal Cell-type specific Circadian Rhythms in Arabidopsis Jixian Zhai Southern University of Science and Technology |
| November 29,14:00-15:55 | Session 4: Spatiotemporal Omics & Plant Organ Development |
| 14:00-14:20 |
The Molecular Mechanisms of Plant Cell Totipotency Ying Hua Su Shandong Agricultural University |
| 14:20-14:40 |
Circadian Regulation of Cotton Fiber Development Kun Wang Wuhan University |
| 14:40-15:00 |
Evolution and development of the simplest flower Christian Siadjeu University of Mainz |
| 15:00-15:20 |
Super-resolution single-cell spatial atlas of plant de novo regeneration Bosheng Li Peking University Institute of Advanced Agricultural Sciences |
| 15:20-15:35 |
Spatial domain-specific analysis of Photoperiod-1 regulatory networks identifies new candidate genes controlling wheat spike development Yue Qu The University of Adelaide |
| 15:35-15:55 |
Decoding the Cellular Spatiotemporal Dogma in Plant Development Keke Xia State Key Laboratory of Genome and Multi-omics Technologies, BGI Research |
| November 29,16:20-18:00 | Session 5: Spatiotemporal Omics & Plant-Environment Interactions |
| 16:20-16:40 |
Single cell transcriptomics to understand plant-pathogen interactions Wenbo Ma The Sainsbury Laboratory |
| 16:40-17:00 |
Proximity labeling mass spectrometry (PL-MS) in plant biology Zhiyong Wang Stanford University |
| 17:00-17:20 |
Spatiotemporal Expression and Functional Dynamics of Phytosulfokine Receptor (PSKR) in ABA Signaling and Leaf Senescence Ananda Mustafiz South Asian University |
| 17:20-17:40 |
Spatiotemporal multi-omics map plant pathogen defense networks during early infection Jian Ye Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences |
| 17:40-18:00 |
Sending the Right Signals: The Molecular Basis of Flavonoid Specificity in the Legume-Rhizobia Symbiosis Jeremy Murray Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences |
| November 30,08:30-09:30 | Keynote |
| 08:30-09:00 |
Spatial omics for food security Robert Henry The University of Queensland |
| 09:00-09:30 |
Pan-Multi-Omics in Wheat: what can we learn? Manuel Spannagl Helmholtz Munich |
| November 30,09:50-11:10 | Session 6: Plant Spatiotemporal Omics: AI and Big Data |
| 09:50-10:10 |
Rational design and robotic breeding of climate-smart crops Cao Xu Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences |
| 10:10-10:30 |
Hypernetwork inference of dynamic biosystems from big static data Rongling Wu Beijing Institute of Mathematical Sciences and Applications |
| 10:30-10:50 |
Human Genome Foundation Model: An Open Science Project in Zhejiang Lab Kai Ding Zhejiang Lab |
| 10:50-11:10 |
Towards cells in silico Ge Gao Peking University |
| November 30,13:00-14:00 | Keynote |
| 13:00-13:30 |
Integrated Omics for Studying Plant Metabolism in the Age of AI Jing-Ke Weng Northeastern University |
| 13:30-14:00 |
pH-mediated cell-cell communication primes disease resistance in plants Jianmin Zhou Yazhouwan National Laboratory |
| November 30,14:00-15:40 | Session 7: Spatiotemporal Omics & Plant Metabolism |
| 14:00-14:20 |
Spatiotemporal Dynamics and Regulatory Network of Metabolism in Rice Jie Luo Yazhouwan National Laboratory |
| 14:20-14:40 |
Deciphering the Plant Specialized Metabolism by Single-Cell Evangelos Tatsis Hainan University |
| 14:40-15:00 |
ShinyCardinal: A Comprehensive Platform for Mass Spectrometry Imaging Data Analysis Yonghui Dong Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University |
| 15:00-15:20 |
Decoding the chemical universe of plants with machine learning Tomá? Pluskal Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the Czech Academy of Sciences |
| 15:20-15:40 |
Spatial Metabolite Mapping for Pathway Discovery in Ethnobotanical Plants Paula Berman Volcani Institute |
| November 30,16:00-17:00 | Session 8: Journal Journey |
| 16:00-16:20 |
The driving force of GigaScience in Plant Omics research Dongni Ma GigaScience |
| 16:20-16:40 |
Molecular Plant: Publishing and Flourish Plant Research Xiaofeng Cui Molecular Plant |
| 16:40-17:00 |
iMeta Series Journals and High-Impact Articles Yongxin Liu iMeta |
| 17:00-17:30 |
Closing Remarks Poster Award |