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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsBreakthrough in Maize Resilience: CAU's NLA Innovation
Researchers at China Agricultural University (CAU) have achieved a landmark discovery in crop science, engineering a 'smart switch' in maize that bolsters cold tolerance without compromising nutrient uptake. Published in the prestigious journal Nature on February 25, 2026, the study titled "Rewiring an E3 ligase enhances cold resilience and phosphate use in maize" reveals how targeted gene editing of the NLA gene creates maize varieties better suited to chilly conditions prevalent in northern China.
Maize, or corn (Zea mays L.), a staple crop originating from tropical regions, faces significant hurdles in temperate zones. In China, the world's second-largest producer contributing about 23% to global output, spring maize in the Northeast (NEC) often suffers from chilling injury during seedling stages, leading to yield losses of 13% to 35%.
The NLA Protein: A Natural Seesaw Mechanism
NLA, short for Nitrogen Limitation Adaptation, is an SPX-domain-containing E3 ubiquitin ligase—a protein that tags others for degradation via ubiquitination. Under cold stress (around 4–8°C), NLA accumulates and performs dual roles. First, it degrades JAZ11, a transcriptional repressor, activating jasmonate (JA) signaling pathways that fortify cold tolerance. This InsP (inositol polyphosphate)-independent process helps plants survive low temperatures by enhancing protective responses.
However, NLA's second function creates a bottleneck: it binds InsP6 under cold, then ubiquitinates PT4, a key Pi transporter in roots, leading to its degradation. This represses Pi uptake, forcing farmers to apply excess phosphate fertilizers, which harms soil health and increases costs. CAU lead researchers Yiting Shi and Shuhua Yang describe this as a 'seesaw'—gains in cold resilience come at the expense of nutrient efficiency.
Overcoming the Trade-Off Through Precision Editing
To decouple these functions, the CAU team employed artificial intelligence (AI)-guided structural modeling and ligand docking. They identified a four-amino-acid deletion in NLA's InsP-binding domain, creating the nlaΔ12 allele. This variant retains JAZ11-targeting capability for cold protection but impairs InsP binding, preventing PT4 degradation and sustaining Pi uptake.
Using CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing, they introduced nlaΔ12 into elite maize lines. Protoplast assays confirmed selective redirection: JAZ11 degradation persisted, while PT4 stability improved under cold. A natural PT4(K267A) variant from ubiquitinome-informed GWAS further validated the pathway, showing higher Pi in cold-stressed plants.
Lab and Field Trial Results: Yield Boosts Confirmed
Laboratory tests at 4°C revealed nlaΔ12 plants had significantly higher uninjured leaf area—up to 50% more survival—compared to wild-type. Shoot Pi content rose, reflecting better uptake.
- RT-qPCR showed upregulated JA-responsive cold genes (e.g., ZmLOX10, ZmAOC) without Pi repression markers.
- Proteomics confirmed reduced PT4 ubiquitination.
Field trials in Gongzhuling, Jilin Province (a cold-prone NEC hub), across normal, early, and late sowing in 2024 were pivotal. F1 hybrids (nlaΔ12 × PH4CV) yielded 10–15% more grain per plant and hectare under early sowing simulating chilling. F2 populations segregated for superior performance, proving heritability.
China Agricultural University's Research Powerhouse
CAU, a top-tier institution in plant sciences, spearheaded this via its State Key Laboratory of Plant Environmental Resilience and National Maize Improvement Center. Corresponding authors Prof. Yiting Shi and Prof. Shuhua Yang, along with first author Huan Liao, leveraged multidisciplinary expertise in genomics, protein engineering, and agronomy. Funding from Pinduoduo–CAU Research Fund underscores industry-academia synergy.
The university's Center for Crop Functional Genomics generated transgenic lines, exemplifying CAU's breeding prowess. Previous works, like COOL1 for high-latitude adaptation, build a pipeline for resilient maize.
Implications for Northern China Maize Farming
Spring maize in NEC, covering millions of hectares, faces delayed chilling—lows below 10°C during emergence—causing seedling death and 20–35% losses in severe years (e.g., 1990, 2003).
Broader applications: extend to nitrogen via NLA homologs. In climate change era, with warming altering sowing windows, this fortifies China's 270+ million tons annual maize output.
Read the full Nature paperGlobal Ripple Effects and Breeding Potential
Beyond China, cold snaps plague maize in US Corn Belt, Europe. The SPX module's tunability offers a blueprint for editing other E3 ligases, balancing stresses like drought-salinity. AI-protein design accelerates precise edits, bypassing trial-error breeding.
- Potential 10–20% yield gains in marginal lands.
- Sustainable farming: less Pi runoff, aligning with UN SDGs.
- Exportable tech for Belt and Road partners.
CAU's work positions Chinese universities as agribiotech leaders. Explore China university jobs for roles in gene editing and crop improvement.
Expert Views and Future Directions
Prof. Yang Shuhua notes: "This 'seesaw' mechanism highlights nature's trade-offs; our rewiring turns it into a smart switch for dual benefits."
Next: stack nlaΔ12 with COOL1 for super-resilient hybrids; test multi-nutrient modules. Regulatory approval in China fast-tracks commercialization.
CAU press releaseCAU's Legacy in Maize Innovation
CAU's maize program, with over 100 researchers, has delivered varieties boosting national yields 20% since 2000. Labs pioneer GWAS, CRISPR for traits like lodging resistance (ZmRLR1).
Students and profs thrive; check academic CV tips for CAU applications.
Photo by Danielle Suijkerbuijk on Unsplash
Path Forward: Climate-Resilient Agriculture
CAU's NLA smart switch exemplifies how university research drives food security. As climate volatility rises, such innovations safeguard billions. For careers in this field, visit higher ed jobs, university jobs, rate my professor, and higher ed career advice. Explore China academic opportunities.
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