West Lafayette, Indiana
August 27, 2008
Identifying the corn genes involved with plant cell wall
generation and learning their function will help develop new,
more productive sources of transportation biofuel, according to
two Purdue University
researchers.
Nick Carpita and Maureen McCann will study genes involved in the
formation of cell walls in the group of plants known as grasses,
which includes corn. The goal is to find ways to produce more
biomass containing more sugars that can be efficiently processed
into biofuel.
"The close evolutionary and genomic relationships of maize or
corn to other grasses will take us one step closer to some new,
good sources of bioenergy," said Carpita, a geneticist in the
Department of Botany and Plant Pathology. "Maize cell walls and
the genes responsible for wall formation are characteristic of
all grasses."
The research team will analyze the genes in both maize and
switchgrass. Switchgrass is another plant investigated for
biofuel production, but it also needs modification to increase
yields.
Researchers already know that most plants use about 10 percent
of their entire genome for cell wall construction, but very
little is known about the specific functions of those genes.
"Maize has the same genes arranged in the same order and on the
same chromosomes as the other grasses," said McCann, an
associate professor of biological science. "We'll switch genes
on and off as we identify them to see what they do. Once we know
the genes and their functions, then we can assess which ones
might make good targets for modification for enhanced biomass
and sugars for processing into biofuel."
In the United States, ethanol is mainly made from corn because
starch in the kernels is easily converted to sugar for
fermentation to the alternative fuel. Scientists are studying
ways to more easily produce fuel from plant biomass, which is
composed of cell walls.
Identifying and classifying the genes for cell wall building and
regulation in maize also will help determine how grasses grow
and develop.
A U.S. Department of Energy/U.S. Department of Agriculture
research program to accelerate development of biofuels from
plants funds Carpita and McCann's genomic plant cell wall
construction study with a $1.2 million grant. |
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Nick Carpita |
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Maureen McCann |
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