Cell wall lignin programme: Manipulating lignin to improve biofuel conversion of plant biomass
Find Similar History 39 Claim Ownership Request Data Change Add FavouriteTitle
CoPED ID
Status
Value
Start Date
End Date
Description
An obvious way of improving plant materials for biofuel production would be to manipulate the structure of plant cell walls, since it is resistant polymers in these walls that prevent microbial enzymes from degrading the plant material into simple sugars and ethanol. One of the most important cell wall polymers in this respect is lignin. We already know quite a lot about how lignin is made and how it can be manipulated in woody plants. However much of the plant biomass that could be used to produce energy comes from grasses, and more research is therefore needed to enable us to manipulate lignin in these types of plant. Barley is a good model for the grasses that might be grown for energy applications (e.g. Miscanthus), and there are more research tools available for barley than for most other grasses. Barley and wheat straw waste could also be useful resources for biofuel production, and genetic discoveries in barley are usually transferable to wheat. This project aims to determine how lignin content and structure influence (1) the amount of sugars that can be released from barley straw; (2) how efficiently these sugars can be converted into biofuels; and (3) the amount of energy that can be released from barley straw by burning. This will indicate how the polymer can best be manipulated to make it easier to produce biofuels from plant biomass. We also aim to determine whether any lignin biosynthesis genes are important for barley disease resistance or stem strength, so that we can determine how to manipulate lignin while keeping plants healthy. The genes and genetic markers that we isolate can be used directly in energy crop improvement breeding programmes. Because we will be looking at a lot of different barley varieties, we will also be able to identify which current varieties are best for biofuel production and for burning for heat and energy.
More Information
Technical Abstract:
Plant biomass is made of cell walls of cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin (lignocellulose). It is difficult release the lignocellulosic sugars for biofuel production because lignin is extremely resistant to degradation. We have already proven that manipulating lignin can make cellulose more accessible for papermaking and forage digestibility. It could just as easily be manipulated to improve saccharification of plant biomass, making biofuels more feasible and competitive. We will study the relationship between lignin content/composition and (1) saccharification/fermentation of straw; (2) combustion of different straws. We will work in barley, a good research model for biomass grasses. We will isolate barley genes, alleles, and genetic markers that associate with high saccharification. These can subsequently be used in MAS of improved energy crops. We will also investigate whether any lignin genes are associated with disease resistance or stem strength so that we know how to manipulate lignin while keeping plants healthy. We will achieve this by performing QTL mapping and novel association genetics using both a 'candidate gene' (lignin genes) and a 'hypothesis-free' genome-wide approach. This will tell us which lignin genes most influence saccharification and whether we can manipulate them without affecting disease resistance and stem strength. It will also point out other major loci affecting saccharification, as will eQTL analysis. If possible, we will identify and clone these genes which could be novel candidates for manipulating lignin to optimize biofuel production. Among the genotypes we investigate, there will be TILLING mutants and transgenics suppressed in lignin gene expression, enabling us to determine the effects of more extreme lignin gene alleles or manipulations. We will also characterize the natural diversity that exists in barley landraces for these genes. Useful mutant and landrace alleles can be directly incorporated into breeding programmes.
University of Dundee | LEAD_ORG |
Vietnam Academy of Agricultural Science | COLLAB_ORG |
Australian Research Council | COLLAB_ORG |
University of York | COLLAB_ORG |
The Scottish Government | PP_ORG |
Syngenta Ltd | PP_ORG |
Biomathematics and Statistics Scotland | PP_ORG |
Limagrain UK Ltd | PP_ORG |
Claire Halpin | PI_PER |
Subjects by relevance
- Lignin
- Genes
- Plant breeding
- Biomass (industry)
- Barley
- Biofuels
- Energy crops
- Bioenergy
- Cereal crops
- Papermaking
Extracted key phrases
- Cell wall lignin programme
- Plant cell wall
- Important cell wall polymer
- Extreme lignin gene allele
- Lignin biosynthesis gene
- Lignin gene expression
- Lignin content
- Plant biomass
- Plant material
- Plant healthy
- Woody plant
- Barley gene
- Biofuel production
- Energy crop improvement breeding programme
- Biofuel conversion