J Integr Plant Biol.

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ZmMS1 coordinates ROS homeostasis, lipid allocation, and male fertility for maize breeding applications

Quancan Hou1,2†, Xueli An1,2,3†, Zhenying Dong1, Biao Ma1, Suowei Wu1,2,3, Ke Xie1,3, Ziwen Li1,2, Tingwei Yan1, Yilin Jiang1,2, Taotao Zhu1, Bin Ma1, Lina Zhao1,2, Yan Long1,2,3 and Xiangyuan Wan1,2,3*   

  1. 1. Beijing Key Laboratory of Maize Bio-breeding, School of Advanced Agricultural Sciences, Research Institute of Biology and Agriculture, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China
    2. Zhongzhi International Institute of Agricultural Biosciences, Beijing 100192, China
    3. Beijing Engineering Laboratory of Main Crop Bio-Tech Breeding, Beijing International Science and Technology Cooperation Base of Bio-Tech Breeding, Beijing Solidwill Sci-Tech Co. Ltd., Beijing 100192, China
    These authors contributed equally to this work.
    *Correspondence: Xiangyuan Wan (wanxiangyuan@ustb.edu.cn)
  • Received:2026-03-06 Accepted:2026-05-02 Online:2026-05-26
  • Supported by:
    This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (32330076, 31971958), the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2022YFF1003501), Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China (06500136), and the Beijing Nova Program (20250484967).

Abstract: Identifying male-sterile genes and developing biotechnology-based male-sterility systems are crucial for advancing hybrid maize breeding. However, this progress is hampered by the limited number of characterized key regulators and their incomplete mechanistic understanding in male sterility, as well as fertility instability of male-sterile lines and a lack of efficient maintainer lines in maize. Here, we elucidate the multifaceted roles of ZmMS1, an LBD transcription repressor. ZmMS1 coordinates timely tapetal PCD by repressing ROS- scavenging genes to regulate anther ROS homeostasis, while its DNA-binding activity is redox- sensitive, suggesting a potential redox-dependent feedback mechanism. In addition, ZmMS1 balances lipid allocation between anther cuticle and pollen exine by directly repressing sporopollenin biosynthesis and indirectly promoting cutin/wax formation. Constitutive overexpression of ZmMs1 induces dwarfism associated with GA and ABA homeostasis, and produces ~50% sterile and small pollen grains in maize and rice, offering a potential route for dwarf and male-sterile breeding. Leveraging the findings that loss and precocious expression of ZmMs1 cause recessive and dominant sterility, respectively, we develop a non-transgenic multi-control sterility system and a dominant genic male-sterility system, both showing stable and complete sterility across diverse backgrounds without yield penalty, thereby providing flexible options for hybrid maize breeding. Our findings reveal that ZmMS1, as a redox-sensitive transcription factor, regulates male fertility with previously unrevealed mechanisms, and provide practical tools for efficient hybrid maize breeding.

Key words: hybrid breeding, LBD transcription factor, lipid allocation, maize, male-sterile, pollen and anther, ROS homeostasis, ZmMS1

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