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Contents
Science Update

RoadCrest, a new crested wheatgrass selected for rhizome
development, finer leaves, and shorter stature, is under evaluation near Logan,
Utah.
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New Grass To Hold the Roadside
A new erosion-fighting grass may appear on western roadsides and highways
within a few years. RoadCrest crested wheatgrass tolerates cold and drought and
readily forms rhizomes--horizontal underground stems that send up new shoots.
RoadCrest was developed over 15 years of studies by scientists with ARS and
Utah State University. Tests in four states indicate it should thrive in
temperate, semiarid areas of Intermountain and western Great Plains states. In
these regions, it is best suited where summer temperatures are mild and annual
precipitation ranges from 10 to 20 inches. Compared to many other crested
wheatgrasses, RoadCrest greens up earlier in spring. It requires less seed to
establish a good stand and forms rhizomes more vigorously. RoadCrest also is
shorter--a trait that helps reduce the need for mowing. The new grass is
descended from plants grown from seeds collected in Turkey. Seed should be on
sale by 2000. Kay H. Asay, USDA-ARS
Forage and Range Research
Unit, Logan, Utah; phone (435) 797-3069.
Amino Acid Supplement May Help People With HIV
Can people infected by HIV improve their antioxidant status with supplements
of cysteine, an amino acid? Scientists in Texas have findings that may help
answer this question. Antioxidants boost the body's immune system. They also
protect our organs from damage by a destructive form of oxygen normally
produced in cells' metabolic reactions. But medical researchers know that
levels of the antioxidant glutathione (GSH) can fall as a result of HIV
infection. HIV patients with low GSH levels have increased secondary infections
and cancers and higher mortality. But some scientists have shown that a form of
cysteine called NAC, short for N-acetylcysteine, can raise GSH. Other studies
suggest NAC is ineffective. In the Texas study, HIV-infected volunteers who
took NAC increased their GSH-making efficiency. The amount of GSH in blood
cells increased. This confirms other findings--in the United States, Brazil,
Mexico, and Germany--that NAC is helpful. The Houston study may also shed light
on why HIV infection lowers GSH. The scientists concluded that the HIV-infected
volunteers may have been producing the antioxidant too slowly rather than using
it too quickly. The study of GSH synthesis was small--five HIV-infected
volunteers and five healthy ones. But researchers used an in-depth method,
amino acids tagged with stable isotopes, to measure GSH synthesis.
Farook Jahoor, USDA-ARS
Children's Nutrition Research Center
at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; phone (713) 798-7084.
Anticipating a Nematode's Progress Could Stave It Off
ARS researchers have blazed a shortcut to identifying soybean lines that can
stand up to the soybean cyst nematode. They did this by developing a super
strain of the wormlike pest that they keep confined in a lab for studies. The
nematode has caused woe to growers since its discovery in 1954 in North
Carolina. Now found in most soybean-producing states, it causes greater losses
than all other soybean pathogens combined. It ruined nearly 220 million bushels
of soybeans in 1997. Further, the nematode has consistently overcome whatever
resistance has been available in commercial soybeans. Today, the Hartwig
cultivar developed by the University of Missouri is the only commercial bean
resistant to all nematode races known to be in farmers' fields. The
researchers' new approach is aimed at having a remedy available on the
inevitable day when Hartwig-resistant nematodes begin appearing in fields. In
greenhouse tests, the scientists bred 30 generations of nematodes on Hartwig
plants. This resulted in a strain capable of feeding--and reproducing--on this
ordinarily highly resistant cultivar. Special precautions keep the new nematode
strain safely confined. Researchers will use it as a test population to get a
bead on soybean lines that may hold promise as new sources of natural
resistance.
Lawrence D. Young, USDA-ARS Crop
Genetics and Production Research Unit, Jackson, Tennessee; phone (901)
425-4741.
"Science Update" was published in the
January 1999 issue of
Agricultural Research magazine.
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