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Home NEWS Science News Agriculture

Breakthrough in 3D DNA Looping in Rice Unlocks Potential for Increased Yields with Reduced Fertilizer Use

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
October 29, 2025
in Agriculture
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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In a groundbreaking advancement poised to redefine sustainable agriculture, a team of researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences has elucidated a novel three-dimensional chromatin architecture within rice DNA pivotal for orchestrating enhanced grain yield alongside superior nitrogen use efficiency. Published in Nature Genetics, this study unveils a sophisticated genetic and epigenetic mechanism that reconciles the long-standing trade-off between maximizing crop productivity and minimizing fertilizer input, thereby offering a robust blueprint for the forthcoming wave of green revolution technologies.

The central focus of the research rests on a chromatin looping structure that fine-tunes the transcriptional regulation of the RCN2 gene, a critical molecular determinant governing the development of rice inflorescences—the grain-bearing branches that ultimately dictate yield potential. This looping not only modulates gene expression spatially but also temporally in response to environmental cues, facilitating an optimal balance between carbon assimilation and nitrogen utilization pathways within the plant.

Professor FU Xiangdong and his team conceptualized plant yield improvement as an integrative challenge involving both the “source” tissues responsible for photosynthesis-generated carbohydrates and the “sink” tissues where these assimilates are allocated for growth and development. Leaves, serving as the photosynthetic factories, represent the source, whereas the sinks comprise growing organs such as grains, panicles, stems, and roots where sugars are channelled for biomass accumulation. Enhancing the efficiency of carbon partitioning between these compartments is crucial for simultaneous gains in productivity and nutrient economy.

Delving into the genetic basis of these traits, the researchers identified a major quantitative trait locus, termed qINCA2, which exerts pleiotropic control over photosynthetic capacity, nitrogen assimilation efficiency, and grain number yield parameters. Within this region, a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) located 8,765 base pairs upstream of RCN2 emerged as a key regulatory variant. This subtle DNA sequence alteration triggers a profound upregulation of RCN2 expression by modulating the regulatory landscape of the locus.

Mechanistically, the enhanced expression of RCN2 translates into the attenuation of the interaction between OsSPL14, a pivotal transcription factor promoting panicle branching, and DELLA, a growth repressor protein. This modulation effectively liberates OsSPL14 to activate downstream genes involved in carbon–nitrogen metabolic networks and panicle architecture development. Hence, the SNP enables a finely-tuned molecular switch that amplifies the plant’s capacity to generate more grain-bearing branches without compromising nitrogen uptake or assimilation.

Seeking to elucidate the mechanistic underpinnings of this transcriptional enhancement, the team uncovered that the SNP-bearing region hosts tandem arrays of CCCTC motif repeats, well-characterized in animal systems as insulator-like elements which anchor chromatin loops. Contrary to prior assumptions that CTCF-like chromatin structural proteins are absent in plants, this study identified OsYY1 as the plant ortholog executing a comparable architectural role. OsYY1 binds these CCCTC-rich motifs to extrude chromatin loops, restructuring the spatial genome organization and thus orchestrating gene expression programs in a 3D genomic context.

This chromatin loop extrusion mechanism enables distal regulatory elements to physically contact the RCN2 promoter, switching the gene on or off depending on loop configuration. By precisely editing these DNA regulatory sequences using genome engineering approaches, the researchers demonstrated controlled modulation of chromatin looping dynamics, enhancing carbon flux from source tissues through to sink organs. The outcome was a pronounced increase in harvest index and grain yield, coupled with significantly improved nitrogen use efficiency under limiting nitrogen regimes.

Such an intricate regulatory system integrating spatial genome folding with metabolic and developmental pathways heralds a paradigm shift in crop genetic improvement strategies. The utilization of 3D chromatin architecture manipulation to reconcile yield and sustainability targets addresses one of the paramount challenges in intensifying global food production without exacerbating environmental degradation.

Moreover, this study portends transformative applications beyond rice. The revelation of a plant-specific chromatin architectural protein and a looping mechanism reminiscent of mammalian systems opens new frontiers in plant epigenetics and breeding. The convergence of chromatin biology, molecular genetics, and agronomy promises precision breeding tools that imbue crops with tailored transcriptional landscapes conducive to sustainable intensification.

In summary, the pioneering work led by Professor FU exemplifies how deciphering and harnessing the spatial genome organization of staple crops can unlock latent yield potential while conserving vital resources. The discovery that chromatin loop extrusion mediated by OsYY1 regulates a key yield-associated gene, RCN2, establishes a novel molecular paradigm for advancing the next generation of green revolution crops.

As the global population climbs steadily, innovations that amplify crop yields sustainably are imperative. This insightful research not only extends fundamental understanding of plant genome topology but also translates it into tangible solutions for food security challenges under climate change and nutrient limitations. By marrying epigenomic engineering with conventional breeding, the future of agriculture stands poised for unprecedented breakthroughs in productivity and environmental stewardship.

Subject of Research: Not applicable

Article Title: Enhanced sustainable Green Revolution yield via chromatin loop extrusion-driven transcriptional regulation of RCN2

News Publication Date: 29-Oct-2025

Web References:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41588-025-02376-y

Image Credits: IGDB

Keywords: DNA structure, Crop yields, Sustainable agriculture, Photosynthesis, Gene expression, Chromatin

Tags: 3D DNA looping in ricecarbon assimilation in ricechromatin architecture in plantsepigenetic mechanisms in agriculturegreen revolution technologiesincreased rice yieldsnitrogen use efficiency in cropsoptimizing fertilizer use in farmingRCN2 gene regulationrice inflorescence developmentsustainable agriculture advancementstranscriptional regulation of genes

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