Wednesday, 06-05-2026 | 08:38
Heat stress during germination critically impairs maize seedling establishment and yield stability, yet its genetic basis remains poorly understood. Here, 21 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for heat tolerance were identified in a recombinant inbred line (RIL) population under heat stress (39 °C vs. 28 °C), including a major hypocotyl diameter QTL (qHDT2-1, LOD = 23.68). Concurrently, genome-wide association study (GWAS) in an association panel detected 213 significant SNPs associated with heat tolerance. Population-stable SNPs, pleiotropic SNPs and high-impact QTLs were integrated to identify candidate genes.
Updated News
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- Hunger intensifies in South Sudan as 7.8 million people face high acute food insecurity and 2.2 million children suffer acute malnutrition
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- Extreme heat is pushing agrifood systems to the brink worldwide
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- Tracing impact: A joint mission through Kenya’s BRAINS project
- Success of Fertilize Right pilot in Vietnam’s 1M-Hectare Rice Program show better yields and incomes
Scientific news
- A combination of QTL mapping and genome wide association study revealed key genes for heat tolerance in maize
- Identification of candidate genes for deep-sowing tolerance in rice by genome-wide association study and transcriptome sequencing
- A magnesium efflux transporter required for seed development and eating quality in rice
- Systemic defense signaling in Austrian pine
- Soil organic nitrogen rather than fertilizer drives dinitrogen losses in flooded rice systems
- Genome-wide association study of soybean germplasm derived from modern Canadian and Chinese soybean cultivars to identify novel genes conferring soybean cyst nematode resistance
- ABC transporter BrABCG12 mutation results in tender green glossy leaves in Chinese cabbage
- Metabolomic modelling of sensory characteristics and consumer liking in papaya fruit
- Total flavones from Abelmoschus manihot (L.) Medik. [Malvaceae] extract ameliorates diabetic liver injury: association with ferroptosis suppression and the PI3K/AKT/Nrf2 pathway
- Toward sustainable control of phyto-nematodes: integrating lessons from crops to advance genetic modification in tomato
- Comparative Metabolomic Profiling of Resistant and Susceptible Coffea arabica Accessions to Bacterial Pathogen Infection
- Progress and Prospects of Parasitic Plant Biodiversity Genomics
- Rubisco kinetic acclimation at the holoenzyme level
- Functional genomics in sugarcane breeding: key challenges and strategies
- Regulatory networks and molecular mechanisms underlying salt stress tolerance in rice
Wednesday, 06-05-2026 | 01:34
Extreme heat events currently threaten the livelihoods and health of over a billion people, causing half a trillion work hours to be lost annually, with the prospect for damage to livestock herds and crop yields set to soar higher in the future. Agricultural workers and agrifood systems are on the frontlines, absorbing the greatest impacts from extreme heat.The frequency, intensity and duration of extreme heat events have risen sharply over the past half century, with worrying impacts on agrifood systems and landscapes, according to “Extreme heat and agriculture,” a new report from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).
Wednesday, 06-05-2026 | 01:38
Heat stress during germination critically impairs maize seedling establishment and yield stability, yet its genetic basis remains poorly understood. Here, 21 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for heat tolerance were identified in a recombinant inbred line (RIL) population under heat stress (39 °C vs. 28 °C), including a major hypocotyl diameter QTL (qHDT2-1, LOD = 23.68). Concurrently, genome-wide association study (GWAS) in an association panel detected 213 significant SNPs associated with heat tolerance. Population-stable SNPs, pleiotropic SNPs and high-impact QTLs were integrated to identify candidate genes.
Wednesday, 06-05-2026 | 01:37
The Government of Vietnam has amended its agricultural biotechnology regulations with the issuance of Decree 43/2026/ND-CP, a move aimed at modernizing the country's food and feed sectors. Effective in early 2026, the new framework significantly accelerates market access for genetically engineered (GE) products by slashing standard approval timelines for food and feed from 90 working days down to 45 for products already cleared in at least five OECD or G20 nations. This reform aligns with Vietnam's 2025 designation of biotechnology as a strategic pillar for agricultural growth and is expected to facilitate more efficient trade and domestic production.




















