a. Yazhouwan National Lab, Sanya, Hainan 572024, China;
b. National Key Lab of Crop Genetic Improvement, Hongshan Lab, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan, Hubei 430070, China;
c. Southeast Chongqing Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Chongqing 408000, China;
d. Rice Research Department, Field Crops Research Institute, Agricultural Research Center, Sakha, Kafrelsheikh 33717, Egypt;
e. State Key Laboratory of Seed Innovation, Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China
Funds:
This work was supported by the grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (W2412130, 32572362), High Quality Development Projects of Hubei Province for Seed Industry (HBZY2023B001-03), and the Earmarked Fund for China Agriculture Research System (CARS-01).
Heterosis, commonly referred to as hybrid vigor, describes the biological phenomenon by which F1 hybrids outperform their parents. The exploitation of rice heterosis has made a great contribution to yield improvements and global food security. However, a unified molecular theory explaining heterosis remains elusive. This review consolidates recent advances in rice heterosis research, focusing on genetic and multi-omics. We discuss the contribution of key genes, non-additive gene expression patterns, and metabolic changes that underpin hybrid performance. The genomic, transcriptomic, epigenetic, and metabolomic evidence supporting dominance, overdominance, and epistasis hypotheses for heterosis are highlighted and integrated. The collective evidence suggests that heterosis is not governed by a single universal mechanism but is a complex consequence of synergistic interactions from sequence variation to regulatory networks across multiple omics. We also highlight emerging applications of artificial intelligence (AI) driven prediction in the breeding of next-generation super-hybrid rice. We propose that key points of future heterosis research should extend beyond static omics snapshots to dynamic, developmental, and metabolic pathways related to yield formation, such as energy metabolism, which decode the ontogenetic basis and the mechanistic understanding of heterosis. Progress in this area will accelerate the breeding of high-yielding, resilient hybrid rice cultivars.