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Chemist Fachuang Lu (pointing) and research
associate Hoon Kim view two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance data of a
dissolved whole cell wall. Click the image for more information about
it.
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Probing Tiny Plant Cells to Unleash Big Bioenergy
By Erin Peabody
April 3, 2007 Scientists are now getting their
closest look yet of plant cell walls, thanks to a new viewing method developed
by the Agricultural Research Service (ARS). It's the tough and rigid cell walls
that are currently the biggest hurdle for scientists who are trying to convert
plant cellulose into ethanol.
Chemist
John
Ralph and research associate Fachuang Lu, with ARS'
U.S.
Dairy Forage Research Center in Madison, Wis., created the new cell-viewing
technique by combining a sophisticated solvent with the power of nuclear
magnetic resonance technology.
Today's ethanol is mostly derived from the starch in corn kernels. However,
vast amounts of energy remain locked up in another plant component, called
cellulose, which is found in everything from cornstalks to wood chips to
manure. That's because plants, over the course of millions of years, have
evolved elaborate cell wall structures that guard their sugar-rich cellulose
like a fortress.
The new ARS method is allowing researchers to getfor the first
timea detailed structural view of those cell walls. This gives them
unparalleled insight when it comes to developing superior biomass crops, such
as switchgrass, with easier-to-degrade cell wall structures and traits.
The solvent gently, yet effectively, disentangles cell wall components from
one another so that they can be viewed in solution. Then, using nuclear
magnetic resonance, the scientists can obtain a detailed chemical
"fingerprint" of the major and minor structures in the walls.
Previously, to get a closer look, researchers had to spend weeks laboriously
isolating cell wall parts. The new method yields results in a matter of days.
In addition to its potential bioenergy applications, the cell wall
fingerprinting technique should also prove helpful in solving problems related
to livestock feed inefficiency. That's because the tough and fibrous plant cell
walls that are such a headache for biofuel processors are also wasted in
undigested animal feed.
To learn
more about this research, see the April issue of Agricultural
Research.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.