From

To

LIVE Commodity Data
print view |  email to friend

eNews from Friday, September 7, 2012

Immature Switchgrass Could Help Cellulosic Ethanol Industry

Targeted News Service -- WASHINGTON, DC -- September 6, 2012 -- A gene that keeps switchgrass forever young could have far-reaching implications for the development of the plant as a biofuel crop, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists.

Inserting a specific gene called "corngrass" from corn into switchgrass essentially keeps the perennial grass in its juvenile form--a plant that doesn't flower, doesn't produce seeds, and doesn't have a dormant growth phase. Because of these changes, the sugars making up the plant starch are more readily available for conversion into cellulosic ethanol.

According to Agricultural Research Service (ARS) geneticist Sarah Hake, the starch in these transgenic plants stays inside the stem because it isn't needed elsewhere for nourishing flower buds and blossoms. As a result, starch levels can increase as much as 250 percent, which increases the sugars that can be fermented into ethanol.

Hake, director of the ARS Plant Gene Expression Center (http://www.ars.usda.gov/main/site_main.htm?modecode=53-35-00-00) in Albany, Calif., teamed with University of California-Berkeley (http://berkeley.edu/) plant geneticist George Chuck to conduct this investigation. ARS is USDA's chief intramural scientific research agency, and this work supports the USDA priority of developing new sources of bioenergy.

The scientists observed that the leaves in the transgenic switchgrass are not nearly as stiff as leaves in switchgrass cultivars that haven't been modified. In addition, they determined that leaf lignin is slightly different in the transgenic switchgrass than leaf lignin in other plants. This could lead to new findings on how to break down the sturdy lignin and release sugars for fermentation, a development that will be essential to the commercial production of cellulosic ethanol.

The researchers are now introducing DNA segments called genetic promoters that would "turn on" the expression of the corngrass gene just in aboveground switchgrass shoots. This could help increase root mass development that otherwise would be inhibited by the gene. Hake and Chuck also suggest that developing nonflowering switchgrass varieties would eliminate the possibility of cross-pollination between transgenic switchgrass cultivars and other switchgrass cultivars.

Results from this work were published in 2011 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (http://www.pnas.org/).

Read more (http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/sep12/perennials0912.htm) about ARS bioenergy research in the September 2012 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.

By Ann Perry

(c) 2012 Targeted News Service

Copyright notice
This is a news service of NewsEdge Corporation ©2012. This content is for your personal use only, subject to Terms and Conditions. No redistribution allowed. 

Editor's Picks from Recent eNews

Save the Date for Co-Located 2013 Soy & Grain Trade Summit and Women in Agribusiness Summit

Northstar Agri Industries Announces Oklahoma Expansion Plan

Cargill Reports First-Quarter Fiscal 2013 Earnings

Cargill, Huntsman Corp. and Unipec UK Set Industry Standard on Fuel Efficiency for Chartering Vessels

Consumer Corner: Prices Up With Demand

Features
Current Reports in the Resource Library at Soyatech.com

Soyfoods: The U.S. Market 2012
This annual report provides detailed information on the U.S. market by category, sub-category, brand and distribution channel.

Sponsored Links

Short Course on 'Food Extrusion: Cereals, Protein & Other Ingredients' at Texas A&M University

Live Commodity Prices on Soyatech.com

About Soyatech  |   Advertising Services  |   Privacy Policy  |   Legal Notices  |   Contact Soyatech  |   Site Map
Copyright © 2000-2013 Soyatech, LLC. • P.O. Box 1307 • Southwest Harbor, ME 04679 • USA