West Lafayette, Indiana
April 10, 2001
This February scientists made headlines when they
published the sequence of the human genome ‹ the so-called "code of
life."
But although the Human Genome Project grabs headlines, perhaps the
bigger story in biology will be in plant and animal genomics: the first
benefits to society are likely to come from these areas, where it is generally
easier and less controversial to utilize genetic information, according to
Randy Woodson, director of Purdue University's Office of Agricultural Research
Programs.
"Agricultural genomics is well behind human genomics," he says "But we
can adapt the tools used in the Human Genome Project to find solutions for
problems in food much faster than drugs for human problems can be
brought to the market."
Genomics uses automated laboratory equipment and high-power computers to
identify all of the genes in an organism. These genetic road maps can be
used to create genetically modified organisms, such as Bt corn. Genetic
information also can provide an advantage to traditional crop and
animals breeders that was unthinkable 10 years ago.
"Genomics is much, much more than biotechnology," Woodson says. "Understanding the genome of a crop or animal doesn't always mean we'll
modify the organism's genes. Once we know what every gene in an organism
does, following a trait through a traditional breeding program becomes
much, much easier. If you're wanting to increase disease resistance in plants
or animals, for example, you don't have to grow the plants or animals to
maturity and subject them to years of testing to see if the trait is
there. You can look at their DNA and know whether it's there or not."
Here are examples of plant and animal genomics projects under way at
Purdue University:
PLANT GENOME INFORMATION MAY DOUBLE THE EFFICIENCY OF CROPS WITHIN A
DECADE
Environmental stresses such as frost, heat and drought cause massive
crop-yield losses each year ‹ more, in fact, than losses from insects
and weeds.
Ray Bressan, professor of horticulture and director of Purdue's Center
for Plant Environmental Stress Physiology, and Mike Hasegawa, a Purdue
horticulture professor, are using plant genomics to combat stress
losses.
A small weed that is a cousin to the mustard plant, Arabidopsis‹ which
is to plant scientists what the lab mouse is to medical researchers
is leading Bressan, Hasegawa and other scientists around the world to a better
understanding of how plants withstand these stresses. Scientists use
Arabidopsis to learn the function of plant genes. This is done by
creating a plant that lacks a single gene, and growing the plant to maturity to
determine the missing gene's function.
Purdue researchers have created more than 300,000 genetically altered
plants, and scientists at other institutions have created hundreds of
thousands of additional genetically altered plants. "For all practical
purposes, the genome is saturated; there has been a mutation for every
gene," Bressan says.
Because plant genes are identical, or very similar, in nearly all
species, information from these experiments will be rapidly applied to commercial
crops. Bressan says the accumulating knowledge about plant biology will
cause almost unfathomable changes in agriculture; he says scientists
have learned as much in the past three years as in the previous 100 about how
crops and other plants withstand environmental stresses.
"We'll soon be able to produce more crops with less pesticides, less
fuel, less fertilizer, fewer trips over the field." he says. "We'll produce
much more with much less.
"A couple of years ago I wouldn't have predicted this. But I now think
that within a decade it will be possible to have crops that can withstand the
stresses of early spring and late fall to such an extent that farmers
could plant two crops of corn, soybeans or wheat each year."
CONTACT: Ray Bressan, (765) 494-1336;
bressan@hort.purdue.edu.
GENOME TECHNIQUES HELP SAVE ENDANGERED AND REINTRODUCED WILDLIFE
Small populations of reintroduced or endangered animals can die out
because of problems brought on by inbreeding. Gene Rhodes, a Purdue wildlife
biologist, is improving the odds for these animals through research into
the genomes of wildlife.
"Genetic variation is the currency of evolution," Rhodes says. "By
having a variety of genes in the population, the animals have the ability to
adapt to their environment."
If a small population of wild animals is faced with a crisis, such as a
harsh winter or a new disease, they may all succumb if they are too
genetically similar. But if there is sufficient genetic variability,
some of the animals will survive because they are better equipped to deal with
the crisis.
In some species, only a small fraction of the original genetic variation
remains. "We've seen this with the cheetah, with the northern elephant
seal and with hundreds of other species," Rhodes says.
Rhodes identifies specific gene markers on the genomes of animals he is
studying and then looks to see if markers also are found in the genomes
of other individual animals. Local wildlife biologists then know whether
they need to introduce new animals to improve the genetic variability.
"Wildlife biology has never been one of the big biology thrusts," Rhodes
says. "But the genome mapping projects in humans and other species are
spinning off technologies that we can use in wildlife management."
CONTACT: Gene Rhodes, (765) 494-3601;
gener@fnr.purdue.edu.
IMPROVING THE POLLINATION OF CROPS
Natalia Dudareva, assistant professor of reproductive biology in
Purdue's Department of Horticulture, has found new insights into the genetics of
floral scents ‹ insights that might result in sweeter smelling roses,
plus a bouquet of other benefits.
Improving floral scent is a goal of the $20 billion per year floriculture
industry, but it also is important to agriculture. Almost three-fourths
of all crops depend on insect pollinators attracted by floral scents.
Honeybees alone are responsible for pollinating one-third of U.S. crops.
Many fruits must be pollinated multiple times to produce fruit, and the
number of pollinations helps determine the fruit's size and quality.
"For watermelon it takes about 12 times to have quality fruit, and it takes
25 pollinations for strawberries to maximize berry size," Dudareva says.
Improving the floral scents of fruit trees and plants would be a benefit
for fruit farmers, Dudareva says.
"Plants didn't evolve to produce their scents for the benefit of
humans," Dudareva says, "but floral scents sometimes influenced the decisions
humans made about which plants to cultivate."
CONTACT: Natalia Dudareva, (765) 494-1325;
dudareva@hort.purdue.edu.
STOPPING KILLER BEE GENES FROM ENTERING NORTH AMERICAN HIVES
Highly aggressive stinging behavior in Africanized honeybees ‹ the
so-called "killer bees" ‹ is disruptive to agriculture and can be dangerous to
humans.
These Africanized bees are established in most of South America, Mexico
and in the southern region of the United States. Understanding their
aggressive behavior is important for much of U.S. agriculture ‹ and not just for
honey producers ‹ because one-third of the food produced in the United States
comes from plants pollinated by honeybees. Already many beekeepers in
Mexico
have stopped keeping beehives because of the eager stingers. There is a
need for information to enable bee breeders to identify Africanized bees and
prevent the spread of the stinging trait into commercial bee populations
in the United States.
Purdue entomologist Greg Hunt, in collaboration with Ernesto Guzman-Novoa of
Mexico's agricultural research service, used gene mapping techniques
more commonly used in plant genetics to locate the genes that influence
behavior in Africanized bees.
"We have developed specific gene markers that predict the probability of
queen bees having the African version of stinging genes so it will be
easier for breeders to avoid using them," Hunt says. "Now that we have the
markers we can selectively breed for gentle bees."
The DNA markers are available to other scientists to determine if
honeybee populations in their regions have genes for aggressive behavior. This
research also could lead to the isolation of genes that influence bee
behavior and suggest ways to decrease stinging incidents.
CONTACT: Greg Hunt, (765) 494-4605;
ghunt@entm.purdue.edu.
Writer: Steve Tally, (765) 494-9809;
tally@aes.purdue.edu
Related Web sites:
Genomics backgrounder:
http://persephone.agcom.purdue.edu/AgCom/news/backgrd/genomics_home.htm
Purdue Office of Agricultural Research Programs:
http://www.agriculture.purdue.edu/arp
Purdue genomics program:
http://www.genomics.purdue.edu/
Bressan's professional homepage:
http://www.hort.purdue.edu/hort/people/faculty/bressan.html
Rhodes' professional homepage:
http://www.fnr.purdue.edu/fi/rhodes/rhodes.htm
Dudareva's professional homepage:
http://www.hort.purdue.edu/hort/people/faculty/dudareva.html
Woodson's professional homepage:
http://www.agriculture.purdue.edu/arp/staff/woodson.html
Jeanne Norberg, director
Purdue University News Service
1132 Engineering Admin. Bldg.
West Lafayette, IN 47907-1132
Phone: 765-494-2096
E-mail:
jnorberg@purdue.edu
Purdue University news release
N3454 |