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Review Article|18 Mar 2025|OPEN
A panomics-driven framework for the improvement of major food legume crops: advances, challenges, and future prospects 
Hongliang Hu1 , Xingxing Yuan2 , Dinesh Kumar Saini3 , Tao Yang4 , Xinyi Wu5 , Ranran Wu2 , Zehao Liu4 , Farkhandah Jan6 , Reyazul Rouf Mir7 , Liu Liu8 , Jiashun Miao8 , Na Liu8,9 , , Pei Xu,1 ,
1Zhejiang-Israel Joint Laboratory for Plant Metrology and Equipment Innovation, College of Life Sciences, China Jiliang University, Hangzhou 310018, China
2Institute of Industrial Crops, Jiangsu Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Nanjing 210014, China
3Department of Plant and Soil Science, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX 79409, USA
4State Key Laboratory of Crop Gene Resources and Breeding/ Institute of Crop Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Haidian District, Beijing 100081, China
5State Key Laboratory for Managing Biotic and Chemical Threats to the Quality and Safety of Agro-products, Institute of Vegetables, Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Hangzhou, China
6Division of Genetics & Plant Breeding, Faculty of Agriculture, SKUAST-Kashmir, Wadura Campus, Sopore, Jammu and Kashmir 193201, India
7Centre for Crop and Food Innovation, WA State Agricultural Biotechnology Centre, Murdoch University, Murdoch WA 6150, Australia
8Zhejiang Xianghu Laboratory, Hangzhou, China
9State Key Laboratory for Quality and Safety of Agro-products, Institute of Vegetables, Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Hangzhou, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: ln200811@163.com,peixu@cjlu.edu.cn

Horticulture Research 12,
Article number: uhaf091 (2025)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhaf091
Views: 1639

Received: 04 Feb 2025
Accepted: 13 Mar 2025
Published online: 18 Mar 2025

Abstract

Food legume crops, including common bean, faba bean, mungbean, cowpea, chickpea, and pea, have long served as vital sources of energy, protein, and minerals worldwide, both as grains and vegetables. Advancements in high-throughput phenotyping, next-generation sequencing, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics have significantly expanded genomic resources for food legumes, ushering research into the panomics era. Despite their nutritional and agronomic importance, food legumes still face constraints in yield potential and genetic improvement due to limited genomic resources, complex inheritance patterns, and insufficient exploration of key traits, such as quality and stress resistance. This highlights the need for continued efforts to comprehensively dissect the phenome, genome, and regulome of these crops. This review summarizes recent advances in technological innovations and multi-omics applications in food legumes research and improvement. Given the critical role of germplasm resources and the challenges in applying phenomics to food legumes—such as complex trait architecture and limited standardized methodologies—we first address these foundational areas. We then discuss recent gene discoveries associated with yield stability, seed composition, and stress tolerance and their potential as breeding targets. Considering the growing role of genetic engineering, we provide an update on gene-editing applications in legumes, particularly CRISPR-based approaches for trait enhancement. We advocate for integrating chemical and biochemical signatures of cells (‘molecular phenomics’) with genetic mapping to accelerate gene discovery. We anticipate that combining panomics approaches with advanced breeding technologies will accelerate genetic gains in food legumes, enhancing their productivity, resilience, and contribution to sustainable global food security.