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Designing a plant cuticle in the lab could yield many benefits

Marna Yandeau-Nelson inside her lab.
Marna Yandeau-Nelson inside her lab. Photo by Christopher Gannon, Iowa State University.

Scientists are working to bioengineer a common defense mechanism that most plants develop naturally to protect against drought, insects and other environmental stresses.

The goal is to identify the genetic structure of a plant cuticle and create a roadmap for breeding plants with designer cuticles that can respond to changing climates. The cuticle is a thin, waxy layer that provides a physical barrier between the plant and its environment. The work also has potential biorenewable applications for developing value-added chemicals with industrial functions.

Marna Yandeau-Nelson, an associate professor of genetics, development and cell biology at Iowa State University, is leading the cross-disciplinary team that includes researchers from Iowa State, the University of Delaware and University of Nebraska-Lincoln. The project, which is funded by a $2.65-million National Science Foundation grant, includes a unique partnership with Iowa State’s Science Bound program to provide research opportunities for underrepresented students.

Learn more by reading the complete ISU News article on this research, "Designing a plant cuticle in the lab could yield many benefits."

Dirk Winkelman, biochemistry graduate student
Biochemistry graduate student Dirk Winkelman works on extraction of cuticle-like metabolites under the fume hood inside Marna Yandeau-Nelson’s lab in the Molecular Biology Building. Photo by Christopher Gannon, Iowa State University.