News Release

RevGenUK, a 'single-stop' shop for use in functional genomics

Grant and Award Announcement

Norwich BioScience Institutes

A new project (RevGenUK) is being launched at the John Innes Centre in Norwich to help geneticists understand how plants grow.

This knowledge can be used to improve the ability of crops to grow in adverse conditions or to grow more sustainably with reduced nitrogen fertilisers.

Supported by a grant of £1 million from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), the project builds on the JIC’s expertise in TILLING, a technique to detect mutant genes. Researchers can work out a gene’s function by studying a defective copy of the gene and seeing how this affects the plant. This is known as reverse genetics.

To celebrate the launch of RevGenUK, a one-day mini-symposium is being held at the John Innes Centre on May 15th.

RevGenUK will maintain large populations of mutated plants with thousands of defective genes. Specialised technology is then used to find a gene of interest and seeds from the plant carrying that gene can be ordered by researchers for their own studies.

RevGenUK will initially include only model plants. Lotus japonicus and Medicago trunculata are model legumes, used to study the interactions between plants and symbiotic microorganisms, especially nitrogen-fixing bacteria. This area is of great interest because it may lead to reduced requirements for artificial nitrogen fertilisers. Brassica rapa is a model brassica and is closely related to Arabidopsis, a cress-like plant studied in many laboratories around the world. Brassica rapa is useful for translating knowledge learnt in Arabidopsis to economically relevant crop species such as oilseed rape.

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JIC has been at the forefront of reverse genetics in legumes and brassicas. The RevGenUK project will bring this expertise together into a single platform, adapting the techniques for use in high-throughput sequencing machines, so greatly increasing the efficiency of the process. The service will be based at the John Innes Centre Genome Laboratory and can in the future be extended to include other plant species, to fully exploit the wealth of data being produced by plant genome sequencing projects.

http://revgenuk.jic.ac.uk/

Contacts:
Andrew Chapple, Tel: 01603 251490, email: andrew.chapple@bbsrc.ac.uk

About JIC

The John Innes Centre, Norwich, UK is an independent, world-leading research centre in plant and microbial sciences with over 800 staff. JIC carries out high quality fundamental, strategic and applied research to understand how plants and microbes work at the molecular, cellular and genetic levels. The JIC also trains scientists and students, collaborates with many other research laboratories and communicates its science to end-users and the general public. The JIC is grant-aided by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. http://www.jic.ac.uk

About BBSRC

The Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) is the UK funding agency for research in the life sciences. Sponsored by Government, BBSRC annually invests around £380 million in a wide range of research that makes a significant contribution to the quality of life for UK citizens and supports a number of important industrial stakeholders including the agriculture, food, chemical, healthcare and pharmaceutical sectors. http://www.bbsrc.ac.uk


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