The study mapped the macroscopic and cellular development of maize leaves and internodes, revealing a shared growth design with organ‑specific timing. Using high‑resolution spatiotemporal transcriptome profiling of 272 tissue samples under well‑watered and drought conditions, the authors generated a searchable expression atlas and identified conserved and organ‑specific gene regulatory patterns, including genes linked to leaf angle and vascular development. This resource advances understanding of shoot organ development and drought response for targeted trait engineering in maize.
The study introduces an in-soil fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensing system that continuously records three-dimensional strain from growing pseudo-roots, enabling non‑destructive monitoring of root architecture. Using two ResNet models, the system predicts root width and depth with over 90% accuracy, and performance improves to 96‑98% after retraining on data from actual corn (Zea mays) roots over a 30‑day period. This prototype demonstrates potential for scalable, real‑time root phenotyping and broader soil environment sensing.
The study generated a high-quality genome assembly for Victoria cruziana and used comparative transcriptomics to identify anthocyanin biosynthesis genes and their transcriptional regulators that are differentially expressed between white and light pinkish flower stages. Differential expression of structural genes (VcrF3H, VcrF35H, VcrDFR, VcrANS, VcrarGST) and transcription factors (VcrMYB123, VcrMYB-SG6_a, VcrMYB-SG6_b, VcrTT8, VcrTTG1) correlates with the observed flower color change.
Interactive effect of Moringa oleifera mediated green nanoparticles and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on growth, root system architecture, and nutrient uptake in maize (Zea mays L.)
Authors: Ain, Q. u., Hussain, H. A., Rahman, L., Zhang, Q., Rehman, A., Hussain, S., Uddin, S., Imran, A.
The study evaluated how arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (Funnaliformis mosseae) together with Moringa oleifera‑derived green nanoparticles (FeO, ZnO, and Zn/Fe) affects maize growth, root architecture, organic acid production, mycorrhizal colonization, and nutrient uptake. Characterization of the nanoparticles (SEM, FTIR, UV‑Vis, XRD) and metabolomic profiling of Moringa leaves were performed, revealing that while Zn/Fe NPs performed best alone, the AMF + ZnO combination gave the greatest overall growth benefits and colonization compatibility, suggesting a promising sustainable agricultural strategy.
The study demonstrates that RNA extracted from herbarium specimens can be used to generate high‑quality transcriptomes, comparable to those from fresh or silica‑dried samples. By assembling and comparing transcriptomes across specimen types, the authors validated a plant immune receptor synthesized from a 1956 collection, proving archival RNA’s utility for functional genomics. These findings challenge the prevailing view that herbarium RNA is unsuitable for transcriptomic analyses.
A maize near-isogenic line population designed for gene discovery and characterization of allelic effects
Authors: Zhong, T., Mullens, A., Morales, L., Swarts, K., Stafstrom, W., He, Y., Sermons, S., Yang, Q., Lopez-Zuniga, L. O., Rucker, E., Thomason, W., Nelson, R., Jamann, T. M., Balint-Kurti, P., Holland, J. B.
The study characterized 1,264 maize near‑isogenic lines derived from 18 donor inbreds crossed to the recurrent parent B73, using genotyping‑by‑sequencing and SNP‑chip data to detect 2,972 introgression segments via a novel hidden Markov model pipeline. Disease phenotyping enabled QTL mapping for foliar disease resistance, revealing extensive allelic variation among donor lines, and establishing the nNIL population as a valuable resource for dissecting complex traits in maize.