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Researchers seek to improve drought resistance of biofuels grasses

Planting Setaria viridis
Photo courtesy
Institute for Genomic Biology

Researchers will look for the genes that drive drought tolerance in Setaria viridis, a grass that is closely related to corn and to biofuel feedstocks such as Miscanthus and switchgrass.

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7/23/2012 | Diana Yates, Life Sciences Editor | 217-333-5802; diya@illinois.edu

CHAMPAIGN, lll. — The U.S. Department of Energy has awarded a five-year, $12.1 million grant to a multi-institutional effort to develop drought-resistant grasses for use in biofuels. The Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis will lead the initiative with researchers from the Carnegie Institution for Science, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the University of Minnesota and Washington State University.

Andrew Leakey
University of Illinois plant biology professor Andrew Leakey is part of an effort to improve drought
tolerance in bioenergy grasses. | Photo by L. Brian Stauffer

Andrew Leakey talks about project Researchers talk about the project.

The grant is timely, said U. of I. plant biology professor Andrew Leakey, whose lab will receive $1.8 million of the funding.

“The Midwest is in the midst of one of the worst droughts in decades,” he said, “and anything scientists can do to enhance a crop’s ability to endure such conditions will be a boon to agriculture in general.”

The new research will focus on Setaria viridis, a grass that is closely related to next-generation biofuel feedstocks such as Miscanthus and switchgrass, as well as corn.

Leakey and his colleagues at Illinois will lead field experiments on a variety of Setaria plants to determine the genetic basis of drought tolerance in these and other closely related plants. (Watch a video about the research.)

“The opportunity to use the newest genomic and genetic tools available on this project provides an incredible opportunity for us to advance our understanding of the genes that confer drought tolerance to some C4 crops such as Miscanthus and switchgrass,” Leakey said. “Given the importance of C4 crops for fuel and food and the likelihood that droughts like those seen this year will become more frequent as the result of climate change, that’s an exciting prospect.”

Leakey is an affiliate of the Institute for Genomic Biology at Illinois.

 

Editor's note: To contact Andrew Leakey, call 217-244-0302; email leakey@illinois.edu.
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