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USDA
and DOE to Coordinate Research of Plant and Microbial Genomics: Soybean DNA to
be Decoded
Tuesday, January 17, 2006
WASHINGTON – The U.S.
Departments of Agriculture and Energy announced Monday they will share resources
and coordinate the study of plant and microbial genomics, and the Department of
Energy will tackle the sequencing of the soybean genome as the first project
resulting from the agreement.
"This agreement demonstrates a joint commitment to support high-quality genomics
research and integrated projects to meet the nation’s agriculture and energy
challenges,” said Dr. Colien Hefferan, administrator of USDA’s Cooperative State
Research, Extension and Economics Service (CSREES), who signed the agreement for
USDA.
"Both agencies will leverage their expertise and synergize activities involving
agricultural- and energy-related plants and microbes," said Dr. Ari Patrinos,
Department of Energy Associate Director of Science for Biological and
Environmental Research. "We will enhance coordination of proposed sequencing
projects through the Biological and Environmental Research Microbial Sequencing
Program or the Joint Genome Institute's Community Sequencing Program."
USDA and DOE will establish a framework to cooperate and coordinate
agency-relevant plant and microbial genome sequencing and bioinformatics that
can serve the needs of the broader scientific community and solve problems that
are important to each agency’s mission. This agreement could help speed the
deployment of emerging technologies, such as improved methods of gene
identification and sequence assembly.
The DOE Joint Genome Institute (DOE JGI) will sequence the genome (decode the
DNA) of the soybean, Glycine max, the world’s most valuable legume crop. Soybean
is of particular interest to DOE because it is the principal source of biodiesel,
a renewable, alternative fuel. Biodiesel has the highest energy content of any
alternative fuel and is significantly more environmentally friendly than
comparable petroleum-based fuels, since it degrades rapidly in the environment.
It also burns more cleanly than conventional fuels, releasing only half of the
pollutants and reducing the production of carcinogenic compounds by more than 80
percent. Over 3.1 billion bushels of soybeans were grown in the U.S. on nearly
75 million acres in 2004, with an estimated annual value exceeding $17 billion,
second only to corn and approximately twice that of wheat. The soybean genome is
about 1.1 billion base pairs in size, less than half the size of the maize or
human genomes.
"The soybean represents an excellent example of how DOE JGI is playing a key
role in 'translational genomics,' that is, applying the tools of DNA sequencing
and molecular biology to contributing to the development of new avenues for
clean energy generation and for crop improvement," said DOE JGI Director Dr.
Eddy Rubin. "Effective application of translational genomics to soybean requires
detailed knowledge of the plant's genetic code. With this starting material in
hand, researchers in academia, industry and agriculture will be better
positioned to optimize soybean for the broadest range of uses."
The DOE Joint Genome Institute, supported by the DOE Office of Science, unites
the expertise of five national laboratories, Lawrence Berkeley, Lawrence
Livermore, Los Alamos, Oak Ridge, and Pacific Northwest, along with the Stanford
Human Genome Center to advance genomics in support of the DOE mission related to
clean energy generation and environmental characterization and clean-up. JGI’s
Walnut Creek, Calif. Production Genomics Facility provides integrated
high-throughput sequencing and computational analysis that enable systems-based
scientific approaches to these challenges.
CSREES advances knowledge for agriculture, the environment, human health and
well-being, and communities by supporting research, education and extension
programs in the Land-Grant University System and other partner organizations.
For more information, visit http://www.csrees.usda.gov.
DOE’s Office of Biological and Environmental Research manages a diverse
portfolio of research to develop fundamental biological information and to
advance technology in support of DOE's missions in biology, medicine and the
environment. For more information, visit http://www.sc.doe.gov/ober/ober_top.html
-DOE-
NEWS MEDIA
CONTACTS:
Jennifer Martin (CSREES),
202/720-8188
Jeff Sherwood (DOE), 202/586-5806
David Gilbert (JGI), 925/296-5643
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