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PUBLIC AFFAIRS
Lignin
Research on Spike Moss by ASPB Members Chapple, Weng, Stout, Li
Lycophytes Could Contribute to Cellulosic
Ethanol Production
The National Science
Foundation reported in a news release May 22 that biologists have discovered
that a fundamental building block in the cells of flowering plants evolved
independently, yet almost identically, on a separate branch of the evolutionary
treein an ancient plant group called lycophytes that originated
at least 420 million years ago.
Researchers believe
that flowering plants evolved from gymnosperms, the group that includes
conifers, ginkgos, and related plants. This group split from lycophytes
hundreds of millions of years before flowering plants appeared.
The building block,
called syringyl lignin, is a critical part of the plants scaffolding
and water transport systems. It apparently emerged separately in the two
plant groups, much like flight arose separately in both bats and birds.
Purdue University
researcher Clint Chapple and graduate students Jing-Ke Weng and Jake Stout,
along with postdoctoral research associate Xu Li, conducted the study
with the support of the NSF and published their findings in the May 20,
2008, issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
All four are members of ASPB.
Were excited
about this work not only because it may provide another tool with which
we can manipulate lignin deposition in plants used for biofuel production,
but because it demonstrates that basic research on plants not used in
agriculture can provide important fundamental findings that are of practical
benefit, said Chapple.
The plant studiedSelaginella
moellendorffii, an ornamental plant sold in nurseries as spike mosscame
from Purdue colleague Jody Banks, a member of ASPB. While not a coauthor
on the paper, Banks helped kick-start the study of the Selaginella genome
with NSF support in 2002 and is now scientific coordinator for the plants
genome-sequencing effort conducted by the Department of Energy Joint Genome
Institute in Walnut Creek, Calif.
Because Selaginella
is a relict of an ancient vascular plant lineage, its genome sequence
will provide the plant community with a resource unlike any other, as
it will allow them to discover the genetic underpinnings of the evolutionary
innovations that allowed plants to thrive on land, including lignin,
said Banks.
Chapple and his colleagues
conducted the recent study as part of a broader effort to understand the
genetics behind lignin specifically, as the material is an impediment
to some biofuel production methods because of its durability and tight
integration into plant structures.
Findings from
studies such as this really have implications regarding the potential
for designing plants to better make use of cellulose in cell walls,
said Gerald Berkowitz, a program director for the Physiological and Structural
Systems Cluster at the NSF and the program officer overseeing Chapples
grant. Different forms of lignin are present in crop plant cell
walls; engineering plants to express specifically syringyl lignin could
allow for easier breakdown of cellulose. Overcoming this obstacle is an
important next step for advancing second-generation biofuel production.
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