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AI-summarized plant biology research papers from bioRxiv

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Latest 3 Papers

A Critical Window of Maternal Temperature Effects on Weedy Rice Seed Dormancy

Authors: Auge, G., Nishikata, R., Imaizumi, T.

Date: 2025-12-15 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.64898/2025.12.12.693925

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Oryza sativa

AI Summary

The study identified a critical two‑week window of elevated maternal temperature during weeks 4–5 after flowering that delays dormancy release in weedy rice seeds. Controlled‑environment and field transplant experiments showed that this late‑reproductive‑stage heat exposure postpones germination after after‑ripening, providing insight for predicting seed behavior and improving weed management strategies.

seed dormancy maternal temperature weedy rice heat stress reproductive stage sensitivity

Additive and partially dominant effects from genomic variation contribute to rice heterosis

Authors: Dan, Z., Chen, Y., Zhou, W., Xu, Y., Huang, J., Chen, Y., Meng, J., Yao, G., Huang, W.

Date: 2025-10-17 · Version: 4
DOI: 10.1101/2024.07.16.603817

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Oryza sativa

AI Summary

The study systematically identified heterosis-associated genes and metabolites in rice, functionally validated three genes influencing seedling length, and integrated these molecules into network modules to explain heterosis variance. Predominant additive and partially dominant inheritance patterns were linked to parental genomic variants and were shown to affect 17 agronomic traits in rice, as well as yield heterosis in maize and biomass heterosis in Arabidopsis. The work highlights the quantitative contribution of transcriptomic and metabolomic variation, especially in phenylpropanoid biosynthesis, to hybrid vigor.

heterosis Oryza sativa additive and partially dominant effects metabolomics phenylpropanoid biosynthesis

ERF transcription factor regulons underpin growth-defence trade-off under acute heat stress in rice seedlings

Authors: Nair, A. U., Vishwakarma, S., Guha, T., Kadumuri, R. V., Fritschi, F. B., Chavali, S., Allu, A. D.

Date: 2025-04-22 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.04.21.649784

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Oryza sativa

AI Summary

The study evaluated how acute heat stress affects early-stage rice seedlings, identifying a critical temperature threshold that impairs growth. Transcriptomic profiling of shoots and roots revealed ethylene‑responsive factors (ERFs) as central regulators, with ethylene and jasmonic acid acting upstream, and pre‑treatment with these hormones mitigated heat damage. These findings highlight ERF‑hormone interaction networks as targets for improving rice heat resilience.

heat stress Oryza sativa seedling transcriptomics ethylene responsive factors phytohormone treatment