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Contacts:
Dr. Vincent
L. Chiang, 919/513-0098
Paul K. Mueller,
News Services, 919/515-3470
April
1,
2003
Transgenic
Trees Hold Promise for Pulp and Paper Industries
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The expensive,
energy-intensive process of turning wood into paper
costs the pulp and paper industries
more than $6 billion a year. Much of that expense involves
separating wood’s cellulose from lignin, the
glue that binds a tree’s fibers, by using an
alkali solution and high temperatures and pressures.
Although the lignin so removed is reused as fuel, wood
with less lignin and more cellulose would save the
industry millions of dollars a year in processing and
chemical costs. Research at North Carolina State University
shows promise of achieving that goal.
By genetically
modifying aspen trees, Dr. Vincent L. Chiang, professor
of forest biotechnology, and his
colleagues have reduced the trees’ lignin content
by 45 to 50 percent – and accomplished the first
successful dual-gene alteration in forestry science.
Their results are described in the current issue of
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). According to Chiang, the NC State research
shows not only a decrease in lignin but also an increase
in cellulose in the transgenic aspens. And their work
demonstrates another benefit: the trees grow faster.
That is
very good news for the wood, paper and pulp industries,
which do multibillion-dollar business worldwide.
Fast-growing, low-lignin trees offer both economic
and environmental advantages, because separating lignin
from cellulose – using harsh alkaline chemicals
and high heat – is costly and environmentally
unfriendly. Harvesting such trees, using them as “crops” with
desirable traits, would also reduce pressure on existing
forests.
Chiang
and his team chose aspens because, he says, “they’re
the lab rats of forestry research.” The scientists
scratch the leaves and expose the wound to bacteria
carrying the beneficial genes. Treated leaf-disks,
with their enhanced genomic structure, are then cloned,
producing trees with predictable qualities.
As with any research involving genetic engineering,
Chiang’s modified aspens have faced questions
of real-world properties, resistance to insects and
diseases, and the possibility of unforeseen ecological
impacts. “There is a need for more data concerning
the environmental effects and field performance of
transgenic trees,” said Chiang, “but
four-year field trials of such trees in France and
the United Kingdom show that lignin-modified transgenic
trees do not have detrimental or unusual ecological
impacts in the areas tested.”
In previous
work, Chiang and his team had successfully reduced
lignin in aspens by inhibiting the influence
of a gene called 4CL. The current research modifies
the expression of both 4CL and a second gene, CAld5H,
in the trees. This dual-gene engineering alters the
lignin structure, and produces the favorable characteristics
of lower and more degradable lignin, higher cellulose
and accelerated maturation of the aspens’ xylem
cells.
The research
is described in the paper “Combinatorial
modification of multiple lignin traits in trees through
multigene co-transformation,” published online
by PNAS on March 31.
Chiang
is co-director of the Department of Forestry’s
Forest Biotechnology Group in the College of Natural
Resources at NC State. Headed by Chiang and Dr. Ron
Sederoff, Edwin F. Conger and Distinguished University
Professor of Forestry and a member of the National
Academy of Sciences, the group is one of the world’s
leading research organizations studying the molecular
genetics of forest trees. The Forest Biotechnology
Group is a key part of NC State’s research strength
in genomics, an important new area of scientific research
focused on identifying and mapping all the genes of
living organisms. Its work is leading to a better understanding
of the genetic basis of biological diversity, improved
disease resistance in important tree species, and increased
commercial forest productivity.
According
to Dr. Bailian Li, associate professor of forestry
at NC State, Dr. Chiang’s results
in this aspen model species are “very significant” and
will have dramatic
impacts on the future genetic improvement of forest
trees for pulp and paper production. “The improved tree growth and high cellulose content
will increase pulp-yield production, while the reduced
lignin content will reduce the pulping cost and energy
consumption in the pulping process,” he said. “The
ability to produce high-yield plantations with these
desirable characteristics will enable us to produce
wood more efficiently on less land, allowing natural
forests to be managed less intensively – for
habitat conservation, aesthetics and recreational uses.”
Citing the
Forestry Department’s Industry-Cooperative
Tree Improvement Program – working to improve
plantation productivity, adaptation and disease-resistance
in North Carolina’s loblolly pines – Li
said, “Results from Dr. Chiang’s research
are very encouraging to our research. Although his
research is on aspen, the valuable information on genetic
regulation of wood formation should be useful for our
efforts in producing pine plantations with lower lignin,
higher cellulose, and faster growth rates.”
- mueller -
Note
to editors: An abstract of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences paper follows.
“Combinatorial
modification of multiple lignin traits in trees through
multigene co-transformation”
Authors: Laigeng Li (NC State); Yihua Zhou (Chinese
Academy of Sciences, Beijing); Xiaofei Cheng (the Noble
Foundation); Jiayan Sun (NC State); Jane M. Marita,
John Ralph (University of Wisconsin); and Vincent L.
Chiang (NC State).
Date: Published in the March 31 early online edition
of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Abstract: Lignin quantity and reactivity (which is
associated with its syringyl:guaiacyl (S/G) constituent
ratio) are two major barriers to woodpulp production.
To verify our contention that these traits are regulated
by distinct monolignol biosynthesis genes, encoding
4-coumarate:coenzyme A ligase (4CL) and coniferaldehyde
5-hydroxylase (CAld5H), we used Agrobacterium to co-transfer
antisense 4CL and sense CAld5H genes into aspen (Populus
tremuloides). Trees expressing each one and both of
the transgenes were produced with high efficiency.
Lignin reduction by as much as 40% with 14% cellulose
augmentation was achieved in antisense 4CL plants;
S/G increases as much as 3-fold were observed without
lignin quantity change in sense CAld5H plants. Consistent
with our contention, these effects were independent
but additive, with plants expressing both transgenes
having up to 52% less lignin, 64% higher S/G ratio
and 30% more cellulose. S/G increase also accelerated
cell maturation in stem secondary xylem, pointing to
a role for syringyl lignin moieties in coordinating
xylem secondary wall biosynthesis. The results suggest
that this multigene co-transfer system should be broadly
useful for plant genetic engineering and functional
genomics.
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