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cis-regulatory-variation

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Cis-regulatory variation refers to differences in DNA sequences that control when, where, and how much a gene is expressed, acting through nearby regulatory elements such as promoters and enhancers. In plant science, these variations are a major driver of trait diversity, influencing everything from stress tolerance and flowering time to yield and developmental architecture. Understanding cis-regulatory variation helps researchers identify the molecular basis of adaptive traits and accelerates breeding programs aimed at improving crop performance.

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A cis-regulatory variant in ZmABI45 modulates drought tolerance and adaptation by escaping ZmbHLH80 repression in maize.

PubMed · 2026-04-29

Scientists identified a natural genetic variant in maize that controls how well corn plants survive drought during flowering — the make-or-break window for grain production. A tiny DNA deletion in a gene's control switch keeps a drought-response gene active, shortening the gap between male and female flowering and preserving yield under water stress.

1

A 12-base-pair deletion in the ZmABI45 gene promoter prevents the repressor protein ZmbHLH80 from silencing it, enabling drought-stress responses to activate more readily.

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Maize plants engineered to overexpress ZmABI45 showed significantly shorter anthesis-silking intervals and improved grain yield under drought conditions.

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Evolutionary analysis confirmed the drought-tolerant deletion variant has been positively selected during modern maize breeding and is geographically concentrated in low-rainfall regions.