The scientists are focused on a compound in cell walls
called lignin that contributes to plants' structural strength, but which hinders
extraction of cellulose. Cellulose is the sugar-containing component needed to
make the alternative fuel
ethanol.
The Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research is
funding a $1.4 million, three-year study by Purdue faculty members Clint Chapple,
Richard Meilan and Michael Ladisch to determine ways to alter lignin and test
whether the genetic changes affect the quality of plants used to produce
biofuels. A hybrid poplar tree is the basis for the research that is part of the
DOE's goal to replace 30 percent of the
fossil fuel used annually in the United States for
transportation with biofuels by 2030.
In 2005 ethanol accounted for only 4 billion gallons of the 140 billion gallons
of U.S. transportation fuel used — less than 3 percent. About 13 percent of the
nation's corn crop was used for that production. Purdue scientists and experts
at the U.S. departments of Agriculture and Energy say corn can only be part of
the solution to the problem of replacing fossil fuel.
"If Indiana wants to support only corn-based ethanol production, we would have
to import corn," said Chapple, a biochemist. "What we need is a whole set of
plants that are well-adapted to particular growing regions and have high levels
of productivity for use in
biofuel production."
Chapple and Meilan want to genetically modify the hybrid poplar so that lignin
will not impede the release of cellulose for degradation into fermentable
sugars, which then can be converted to ethanol. The changed lignin also may be
useable either in fuel or other products, they said. Currently about 25 percent
of the material in plants is the complex molecule lignin, which in its present
form could be burned to supply energy for ethanol production, but cannot be
transformed into the alternative fuel.
Altering lignin's composition or minimizing the amount present in a cell wall
could improve access of enzymes. With easier access, enzymes would be able to
more efficiently convert cellulose to sugars. Current treatments used for
extracting lignin from woody products for pulp and paper production are harsh
and pollute the environment, said Meilan, a Purdue Department of
Forestry and Natural Resources molecular tree physiologist.
To advance production of non-fossil fuels, Chapple and Meilan are using genetic
tools to modify the poplar and then study how the alterations changed the
plants' cell walls. Meilan also is attempting to find ways to produce trees that
are reproductively sterile so they are unable to transfer introduced traits to
wild trees.