Madison Scientists Share In NSF Grant To Identify The Role Of Key Plant Genes
Article originally published in October, 1998
Will establish a national facility for "gene knockouts"
Two University of Wisconsin-Madison molecular biologists will receive
$1.8 million over three years to help develop a system to rapidly identify
the function of genes specific to plants.
Michael Sussman and Richard Amasino, along with colleagues at Michigan
State University, Stanford University and Yale University, will share in
a three-year, $8.7 million National Science Foundation grant coordinated
by Pamela R. Green of Michigan State University. Scientists at the four
universities will work together to provide plant biologists across the United
States with a set of powerful tools to reveal the function and relationships
of the 20,000 or more genes in plants.
The grant is one of 20 awarded in October in the first year of NSF's
plant genome initiative, which targets genomic studies of food crops, such
as corn and soybeans, and other commercially important plants. However,
the UW-Madison scientists and their colleagues will be developing techniques
using Arabidopsis, a small plant in the mustard family.
"The impact of our work will extend far beyond Arabidopsis,"
says Sussman, an expert on plant membrane proteins. "We expect that
most of the genes we identify in Arabidopsis will be important in crops
and other plants of commercial value."
Arabidopsis has become the favorite model plant of scientists and was
the first plant selected to be sequenced. Several years ago NSF began an
effort to sequence all of the plant's genes, according to Sussman, who directs
the UW Biotechnology Center and is a member of the Department of Horticulture
in the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences. About 30 percent of the
Arabidopsis genes have been sequenced and the task will be completed in
two or three years. Researchers from the four universities will be building
their work on that foundation.
By next fall, the UW-Madison biologists will develop a facility to serve
researchers around the country by creating Arabidopsis plants with selective
mutations or "gene knockouts."
"You can't tell what a gene is doing unless you disable or knock
out that specific gene before evaluating how the resulting plant responds
under a range of conditions," Sussman says. He and colleagues described
a technique for creating knockouts two years ago in research published in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. In a Science magazine
article last May, Sussman's laboratory used the technique to evaluate a
gene that controls potassium movement into plant cells.
Scientists at other universities will be developing DNA microarrays,
also called "DNA chips," for Arabidopsis. With a new DNA chip
for Arabidopsis, researchers could determine which of the plant's genes
are switched on and producing proteins and which are inactive. About the
size of a microscope slide, DNA chips allow scientists to study gene expression
patterns in different parts of a plant under a variety of environmental
conditions. The technique can also be used to screen mutants for gene knockouts.
The combination of the gene-knockout and DNA-chip techniques will enormously
accelerate research on plant genes and what they do.
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Writer: George Gallepp
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