Heterosis, which has greatly increased maize yields, is associated with gene expression patterns during key developmental stages that enhance hybrid phenotypes relative to parental phenotypes. Before heterosis can be more effectively used for crop improvement, hybrid maize developmental gene expression patterns must be better understood. Here, six maize hybrids, including the popular hybrid Zhengdan958 (ZC) from China, were studied. Maize hybrids created in-house were generated using an incomplete diallel cross (NCII)-based strategy from four elite inbred parental lines. Differential gene expression (DEG) profiles corresponding to three developmental stages revealed that hybrid partial expression patterns exhibited complementarity of expres...
Heterosis, or hybrid vigour, is a predominant phenomenon in plant genetics, serving as the basis of ...
Abstract Background It was proposed that differentially-expressed genes, aside from genetic variatio...
Maize (Zea mays) displays an exceptional level of structural genomic diversity, which is likely uniq...
Abstract Background Heterosis is the superior performance of F1 hybrid progeny relative to the paren...
Heterosis, or hybrid vigor, contributes to superior agronomic performance of hybrids compared to the...
Deciphering the molecular basis of heterosis would yield genes and markers for designing improved ma...
Heterosis, or hybrid vigor, refers to the superiority of F₁hybrid performance over the mean of its p...
Abstract Heterosis is widely exploited in plant breeding, although its molecular basis is still not ...
Although heterosis has been exploited commercially for close to a century, the molecular mechanisms ...
Typically, F1-hybrids are more vigorous than their homozygous, genetically distinct parents, a pheno...
Heterosis refers to the deviation of the F1 progeny from the phenotypic mean of the parental plants,...
Breeders are empirically exploiting the phenomenon of heterosis, also described as hybrid vigor, for...
In spite of commercial use of heterosis in agriculture, the molecular basis of heterosis is poorly u...
Heterosis and increasing planting density have contributed to improving maize grain yield (GY) for s...
Heterosis specifies the superior performance of heterozygous individuals and although used in plant ...
Heterosis, or hybrid vigour, is a predominant phenomenon in plant genetics, serving as the basis of ...
Abstract Background It was proposed that differentially-expressed genes, aside from genetic variatio...
Maize (Zea mays) displays an exceptional level of structural genomic diversity, which is likely uniq...
Abstract Background Heterosis is the superior performance of F1 hybrid progeny relative to the paren...
Heterosis, or hybrid vigor, contributes to superior agronomic performance of hybrids compared to the...
Deciphering the molecular basis of heterosis would yield genes and markers for designing improved ma...
Heterosis, or hybrid vigor, refers to the superiority of F₁hybrid performance over the mean of its p...
Abstract Heterosis is widely exploited in plant breeding, although its molecular basis is still not ...
Although heterosis has been exploited commercially for close to a century, the molecular mechanisms ...
Typically, F1-hybrids are more vigorous than their homozygous, genetically distinct parents, a pheno...
Heterosis refers to the deviation of the F1 progeny from the phenotypic mean of the parental plants,...
Breeders are empirically exploiting the phenomenon of heterosis, also described as hybrid vigor, for...
In spite of commercial use of heterosis in agriculture, the molecular basis of heterosis is poorly u...
Heterosis and increasing planting density have contributed to improving maize grain yield (GY) for s...
Heterosis specifies the superior performance of heterozygous individuals and although used in plant ...
Heterosis, or hybrid vigour, is a predominant phenomenon in plant genetics, serving as the basis of ...
Abstract Background It was proposed that differentially-expressed genes, aside from genetic variatio...
Maize (Zea mays) displays an exceptional level of structural genomic diversity, which is likely uniq...