The genetic architecture of leaf vein density traits and its importance for photosynthesis in maize
Authors: Coyac-Rodriguez, J. L., Perez-Limon, S., Hernandez-Jaimes, E., Hernandez-Coronado, M., Camo-Escobar, D., Alonso-Nieves, A. L., Ortega-Estrada, M. d. J., Gomez-Capetillo, N., Sawers, R. J., Ortiz-Ramirez, C. H.
Using diverse Mexican maize varieties and a MAGIC population, the study demonstrated that leaf vein density is both variable and plastic, correlating positively with photosynthetic rates for small intermediate veins and increasing under heat in drought-adapted lines. Twelve QTLs linked to vein patterning were identified, highlighting candidate genes for intermediate vein development and shedding light on the evolution of high-efficiency C4 leaf architecture.
leaf venation density C4 photosynthesis Zea mays QTL mapping MAGIC population
Physics-Informed Neural Network Methods for Predicting Plant Height Development
Authors: Shao, Y., van Eeuwijk, F., Peeters, C., Zumsteg, O., Athanasiadis, I., van Voorn, G.
The study introduces a hybrid modeling framework that integrates a logistic ordinary differential equation with a Long Short-Term Memory neural network to form a Physics-Informed Neural Network (PINN) for predicting wheat plant height. Using only time and temperature as inputs, the PINN outperformed other longitudinal growth models, achieving the lowest average RMSE and reduced variability across multiple random initializations. The results suggest that embedding biological growth constraints within data‑driven models can substantially improve prediction accuracy for plant traits.
The study identified the poplar homolog of Arabidopsis HDG11 and generated transgenic poplar hybrids overexpressing PtaHDG11. Constitutive expression conferred markedly improved drought tolerance, as evidenced by higher leaf water content, reduced oxidative damage, up‑regulation of antioxidant genes, and greater post‑stress biomass, while also causing a glabrous phenotype. These results highlight PtaHDG11 as a promising target for breeding drought‑resilient trees.
HDG11 drought tolerance Populus hybrid antioxidant genes transgenic overexpression
Southern South American Maize Landraces: A Source of Phenotypic Diversity
Authors: Dudzien, T. L., Freilij, D., Defacio, R. A., Fernandez, M., Paniego, N. B., Lia, V. V., Dominguez, P. G.
The study assessed 17 morphological, biochemical, and salt‑stress tolerance traits in 19 maize (Zea mays) landrace accessions from northern Argentina, revealing substantial variation both within and among accessions. Redundancy analysis linked phenotypic variation to the altitude of the collection sites, underscoring the potential of these landraces as sources of diverse biochemical and stress‑related traits for breeding.
The study shows that maize plants carrying autophagy-defective atg10 mutations exhibit delayed flowering and significant reductions in kernel size, weight, and number, culminating in lower grain yield. Reciprocal crossing experiments reveal that the maternal genotype, rather than the seed genotype, primarily drives the observed kernel defects, suggesting impaired nutrient remobilization from maternal tissues during seed development.
The interplay between autophagy and the carbon/nitrogen ratio as key modulator of the auxin-dependent chloronema-caulonema developmental transition in Physcomitrium patens.
Authors: Pettinari, G., Liberatore, F., Mary, V., Theumer, M., Lascano, R., Saavedra, L. L.
Using the bryophyte Physcomitrium patens, the study shows that loss of autophagy enhances auxin‑driven caulonemata differentiation and colony expansion under low nitrogen or imbalanced carbon/nitrogen conditions, accompanied by higher internal IAA, reduced PpPINA expression, and up‑regulated RSL transcription factors. Autophagy appears to suppress auxin‑induced differentiation during nutrient stress, acting as a hub that balances metabolic cues with hormonal signaling.
autophagy auxin signaling carbon/nitrogen ratio Physcomitrium patens caulonemata development
Dynamic regulation of protein homeostasis underlies acquiredthermotolerance in Arabidopsis
Thermopriming enhances heat stress tolerance by orchestrating protein maintenance pathways: it activates the heat shock response (HSR) via HSFA1 and the unfolded protein response (UPR) while modulating autophagy to clear damaged proteins. Unprimed seedlings cannot mount these responses, leading to proteostasis collapse, protein aggregation, and death, highlighting the primacy of HSR and protein maintenance over clearance mechanisms.
thermopriming heat shock response unfolded protein response autophagy proteostasis
The CCCH Zinc Finger Gene PgCCCH50 from Pearl Millet Confers Drought and Salt Tolerance through an ABA-Dependent PgAREB1-PgCCCH50 Module
The authors performed a genome-wide analysis of 53 CCCH zinc‑finger genes in pearl millet, identified seven stress‑responsive members and demonstrated that overexpressing PgC3H50 in Arabidopsis enhances drought and salt tolerance. They showed that the ABA‑responsive transcription factor PgAREB1 directly binds the PgC3H50 promoter, activating its expression, as confirmed by yeast one‑hybrid, dual‑luciferase and EMSA assays, defining a new PgAREB1‑PgC3H50 regulatory module.
CCCH zinc finger proteins drought tolerance salinity stress ABA signaling Pearl millet
The influence of heavy metal stress on the evolutionary transition of teosinte to maize
Authors: Acosta Bayona, J. J., Vallebueno-Estrada, M., Vielle-Calzada, J.-P.
The study tests whether heavy‑metal stress contributed to maize domestication by exposing teosinte (Zea mays ssp. parviglumis) and the Palomero toluqueno landrace to sublethal copper and cadmium, then analysing genetic diversity, selection signatures, and transcriptomic responses of three chromosome‑5 heavy‑metal response genes (ZmHMA1, ZmHMA7, ZmSKUs5). Results reveal strong positive selection on these genes, heavy‑metal‑induced phenotypes resembling modern maize, and up‑regulation of Tb1, supporting a role for volcanic‑derived metal stress in early maize evolution.
heavy metal stress maize domestication Zea mays positive selection Tb1
Evolution of HMA-integrated tandem kinases accompanied by expansion of target pathogens
Authors: Asuke, S., Tagle, A. G., Hyon, G.-S., Koizumi, S., Murakami, T., Horie, A., Niwamoto, D., Katayama, E., Shibata, M., Takahashi, Y., Islam, M. T., Matsuoka, Y., Yamaji, N., Shimizu, M., Terauchi, R., Hisano, H., Sato, K., Tosa, Y.
The study cloned the resistance genes Rmo2 and Rwt7 from barley and wheat, revealing them as orthologous tandem kinase proteins (TKPs) with an N‑terminal heavy metal‑associated (HMA) domain. Domain‑swapping experiments indicated that the HMA domain dictates effector specificity, supporting a model of TKP diversification into paralogs and orthologs that recognize distinct pathogen effectors.
tandem kinase proteins HMA domain disease resistance barley wheat