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Diverse Roles of Ethylene in Maize Growth and Development and Its Importance in Shaping Plant Architecture

Overview
Journal J Exp Bot
Specialty Biology
Date 2025 Feb 20
PMID 39973110
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Abstract

The gaseous plant hormone ethylene is a key developmental and growth regulator, and a pivotal endogenous response signal to abiotic and biotic interactions, including stress. Much of what is known about ethylene biosynthesis, perception and signaling comes from decades of research primarily in Arabidopsis thaliana and other eudicot model systems. In contrast, detailed knowledge on the ethylene pathway and response to the hormone is markedly limited in maize (Zea mays L.), a global cereal crop that is a major source of calories for humans and livestock, as well as a key industrial biofeedstock. Recent reports of forward screens and targeted reverse genetics have provided important insight into conserved and unique differences of the ethylene pathway and downstream responses. Natural and edited allelic variation in the promoter regions and coding sequences of ethylene biosynthesis and signaling genes alters maize shoot and root architectures, and plays a crucial role in biomass and grain yields. This review discusses recent advances in ethylene research in maize with an emphasis on ethylene's role in regulating growth and development of the shoot and root systems, and ultimately how this crucial hormone impacts plant architecture and grain yield.