Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Suitable nitrogen application rate can significantly increase grain filling rate and yield and improve nutritional quality. Denghai 518 (DH518) and Zhengdan 958 (ZD958) were used as experimental materials in this study. A field experiment with four treatments, no nitrogen treatment (N), decrement nitrogen application rate (N, 129 kg N·hm), suitable nitrogen rate (N, 184.5 kg N·hm) and excessive nitrogen rate (N, 300 kg N·hm), was conducted to explore the effects of nitrogen fertilization on grain filling parameters and nutritional qualities of summer maize. Results showed that grain filling characteristics, grain dry weight, and yield in N treatment was decreased. With increasing nitrogen application rate in the suitable range, average filling rate, grain dry weight, and yield increased. Grain yield of two hybrids in N and N treatments was higher than that of N by 16.4%-57.2% and 35.8%-65.1%, respectively. Grain protein, soluble sugar, starch contents and the ratio of amylopectin and amylase contents were lower and crude fat content was higher in N treatment. Grain protein content, soluble sugar content and starch content in N of DH518 were higher than that of N and N by 32.5% and 6.5%, 19.9% and 9.5%, 8.9% and 5.2%, and the ratio of amylopectin and amylose contents was increased. Grain protein, soluble sugar and starch contents in N of ZD958 were higher than that of N and N by 16.9% and 7.8%, 30.5% and 14.8%, 11.5% and 5.7%, and the ratio of amylopectin and amylase contents was increased. Crude fat content in N of both hybrids decreased significantly by 4.8%-12.3% than that of N and N. However, yield and nutritional quality was increased in N treatment than that of N. Our results suggested that suitable nitrogen rate could enhance grain filling, grain weight, and grain nutritional quality.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.13287/j.1001-9332.201911.021DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

grain filling
20
nitrogen application
16
application rate
16
nutritional quality
16
grain
13
suitable nitrogen
12
nitrogen rate
12
grain protein
12
soluble sugar
12
ratio amylopectin
12

Similar Publications

Cell wall invertase improves grain nutrition via regulating sugar and hormone metabolism gene expression in transgenic soybean.

Ann Bot

September 2025

The Engineering Research Institute of Agriculture and Forestry, Ludong University, 186 Hongqizhong Road, Yantai, Shandong Province, China 264025.

Background And Aims: Cell wall invertases have multiple roles in plant growth and development, yet their biological functions in seed oil production are still not understood.

Methods: In the present study, the Oryza sativa (rice) cell wall invertase gene OsGIF1 (GRAIN INCOMPLETE FILLING 1) was ectopically expressed in Glycine max (Soybean) and its functions in grain yield and seed nutrition was investigated.

Key Results: We found that constitutive expression of OsGIF1 significantly improved biomass production, grain yield and seed nutrition in transgenic plants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Gene expression of developing seeds drives essential processes such as nutrient storage, stress tolerance and germination. However, the spatial organisation of gene expression within the complex structure of the seed remains largely unexplored. Here we report the use of the STOmics spatial transcriptomics platform to visualise spatial expression patterns in the wheat (Triticum aestivum) seed at the critical period of grain filling in mid-seed development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Genomic selection is an extension of marker-assisted selection by leveraging thousands of molecular markers distributed across the genome to capture the maximum possible proportion of the genetic variance underlying complex traits. In this study, genomic prediction models were developed by integrating phenological, physiological, and high-throughput phenotyping traits to predict grain yield in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) under three environmental conditions: irrigation, drought stress, and terminal heat stress.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: As wheat is a globally important staple crop, the molecular regulatory network underlying heterosis in wheat remains incompletely understood. The flag leaf is the primary source of photoassimilates during grain filling and plays a crucial role in yield formation. However, the genetic mechanisms linking flag leaf development to heterosis are still unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Alternate wetting and moderate soil drying (AWMD) enhances the physicochemical properties of rice starch by promoting grain-filling in inferior grains of rice.

Food Chem X

August 2025

Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Crop Genetics and Physiology/Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Crop Cultivation and Physiology, Agricultural College, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou 225009, China.

Water scarcity is the major challenge to sustainable rice production. This study examines how alternate wetting and moderate soil drying (AWMD), a widely adopted water-saving practice, influences grain-filling dynamics and starch physicochemical properties in both superior grains (located on apical primary branches, flower earlier) and inferior ones (located on proximal secondary branches, flower later). Results showed that AWMD enhanced grain-filling in inferior grains: it increased the mean (G) and peak (G) filling rates by 26.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF