PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

CRISPR manipulates plants’ flower powers

CRISPR manipulates plants’ flower powers
2025-02-19
(Press-News.org) Humans have appreciated the beauty of flowers for centuries. Yet, flowers aren’t just aesthetically pleasing. They also play a crucial role in plant reproduction. In all plants, a well-studied gene with a curious name, Unusual Floral Organs (UFO), orchestrates the flowering process. UFO expression hinges on another complex process called cis-regulation. And this one has remained a “black box” of plant biology research for years.

Now, using CRISPR gene editing, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) Professor and HHMI Investigator Zachary Lippman and his colleagues have begun to uncover the ways in which fragments of non-coding DNA called cis-regulatory sequences dictate how, when, and at what level UFO is expressed. Lippman says this work could one day help researchers make better decisions about which genes to manipulate for more desirable crops. He explains:

“We could have chosen many other genes. We chose this one because it was pretty clear it was going to have that kind of exquisite control. That’s because the flower is a complex structure, and the genes that control its development are very regulated in time, space, and levels.”

The researchers focused on two distantly related flowering plants: tomato and Arabidopsis. First, they identified DNA sequences that don’t code for proteins but are still present in the segment of DNA that turns UFO on and off in both plants.

The mere fact the sequences are conserved makes them good candidates for targeting, Lippman says. “It’s a good indication that those sequences have been selected by evolution because they’re important in controlling gene expression.” However, he adds:

“You can’t know until you actually do mutations in those sequences and see what happens.”

Lippman and his team manipulated those non-coding sequences with CRISPR to see how it would affect flower formation. They discovered that the sequences strongly impact flowering in both plants. However, manipulations affect each species differently. For example, deleting a certain sequence in tomatoes resulted in flower formation, but deleting the matching sequence in Arabidopsis suppressed flowering.

“It’s fascinating that different deletions had opposite effects on flowering,” says CSHL postdoc Amy Lanctot. “It seems these sequences act together to balance each other out and make sure plants are flowering at the right place and time.”

The finding could help biologists better understand how cis-regulatory fragments control gene function. “The goal is to reach a better understanding of how functionally complex cis-regulatory DNA is,” Lippman says. “If we can do that, we can better determine which sequences we want to mutate and what kind of mutations we want to make.”

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
CRISPR manipulates plants’ flower powers

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Text message tool addresses “time toxicity” for cancer patients

2025-02-19
PHILADELPHIA – Cancer patients spend a lot of time on their care. Meeting with doctors and other members of their health care team, getting labs and other tests, picking up prescriptions, and undergoing treatment all takes time. So does getting to and from each appointment, sitting in the waiting room between each appointment, and so on. In recent years, cancer researchers have worked to quantify the level of “time toxicity” or time spent commuting to, waiting for, and receiving cancer treatment. Now, for the first time, a pilot study has shown it’s possible to use digital technology to safely ...

New therapy may effectively control HIV in Uganda

New therapy may effectively control HIV in Uganda
2025-02-19
A multi-national, multi-institutional study led by Weill Cornell Medicine investigators found little natural resistance to a new HIV therapy called lenacapavir in a population of patients in Uganda. The study, published Jan. 30 in the Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, adds to growing evidence that lenacapavir may be a powerful new tool in the global anti-HIV drug arsenal. Approximately, 1.5 million people are living with HIV in Uganda. “Our data shows that only 1.6% of the individuals studied are living with HIV ...

Global retreat of glaciers has strongly accelerated

Global retreat of glaciers has strongly accelerated
2025-02-19
There are currently around 275,000 glaciers worldwide, in which huge quantities of fresh water are stored. But this reservoir is increasingly shrinking. Since the turn of the millennium, glaciers around the world – i.e. ice masses on land excluding the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets – have lost around 273 billion tonnes of ice per year. This corresponds to about five and a half times the volume of Lake Constance. Overall, the world’s glaciers have lost around five per cent of their total volume since the year 2000. This is the conclusion reached by an international research team of which Tobias Bolch from the Institute of Geodesy ...

Data from all 50 states shows early onset breast cancer is on the rise in younger women: Does place of exposure matter?

2025-02-19
February 19, 2025-- Breast cancer incidence trends in U.S. women under 40 vary by geography and supports incorporating location information with established risk factors into risk prediction, improving the ability to identify groups of younger women at higher risk for early-onset breast cancer, according to a new study at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. This study comprehensively examined trends across different states, regions, metropolitan versus non-metropolitan areas and by racial and ethnic groups.  It also is one of the first to incorporate ...

California prison resentencing project yields modest results

2025-02-19
A three-year effort to encourage California prosecutors to reconsider the sentences given to some people in state prison has resulted in a modest number of people being resentenced, but improvements are needed to speed review of more cases, according to a new RAND report.   During the project involving nine counties, more than 1,100 cases received an initial review. After comprehensive reviews by county district attorneys for the suitability for resentencing, 227 individuals eventually received new sentences and 174 of those offenders had been released ...

Revealing the double-edged role of oxygen vacancy on ZrO2 catalysts in propane dehydrogenation

Revealing the double-edged role of oxygen vacancy on ZrO2 catalysts in propane dehydrogenation
2025-02-19
Propane dehydrogenation (PDH), as an efficient catalytic production process to obtain propylene, has developed rapidly in recent years. Previous studies have shown that zirconia exhibited excellent performance in the PDH, with the coordination-unsaturated zirconium (Zrcus) around the oxygen vacancy being the active site in the reaction. However, the critical role of oxygen vacancy is still remaining elusive, and lacked a rationale to establish a relation between structure and performance. Moreover, the strong binding of propene and hydrogen molecules shadowed ...

Mutation increases enzyme in mouse brains linked to schizophrenia behaviors

Mutation increases enzyme in mouse brains linked to schizophrenia behaviors
2025-02-19
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A genetic mutation found in two human patients with schizophrenia also increased schizophrenia-related behaviors in mice with the same mutation, a rare finding of a direct genetic link to psychosis, report researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and colleagues in Massachusetts and Germany. The mutation increases levels of glycine decarboxylase, or GLDC, an enzyme responsible for regulating glycine in the brain. Glycine activates receptors for the neurotransmitter glutamate, called NDMA receptors. “The genetics of schizophrenia is very complex, and it ...

We can farm more seafood while minimizing its impact on biodiversity, U-M research shows

2025-02-19
Humanity can farm more food from the seas to help feed the planet while shrinking mariculture's negative impacts on biodiversity, according to new research led by the University of Michigan.  There is a catch, though: We need to be strategic about it. "We can achieve this sustainable mariculture development," said Deqiang Ma, who led the study as a postdoctoral researcher at the U-M School for Environment and Sustainability. "With strategic planning, we can achieve the goal of conserving marine species while meeting the global demand for the ...

Professor Kazunari Domen: Groundbreaking contributions to photocatalytic water splitting

Professor Kazunari Domen: Groundbreaking contributions to photocatalytic water splitting
2025-02-19
Harnessing solar energy to produce hydrogen from water – the photocatalytic water splitting reaction, is a promising approach for the carbon-neutrality future. This process utilizes semiconductor materials to harvest sunlight for the splitting of water into hydrogen fuel with oxygen gas generated as by-product. The solar hydrogen, as a carbon-free energy source, holds immense potential for decarbonizing industries, addressing global energy demands and mitigating environmental challenges. However, realizing practical ...

Electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction: Dynamic surfaces of Cu-based catalysts

Electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction: Dynamic surfaces of Cu-based catalysts
2025-02-19
The continued massive consumption of fossil fuels in modern societies has led to a range of environmental issues, including excessive CO2 emissions. In this regard, electrochemical CO2 reduction can convert intermittent electricity into chemical fuels and other value-added products, which holds the potential to close the carbon cycle. Among the various catalysts, metals are the most extensively studied heterogeneous CO2RR electrocatalysts and can be classified into three categories based on the main products. Containing Bi, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Mechanochemistry strikes again – A facile means for generating organolithium molecules

Breakthrough in high-performance oxide-ion conductors using rubidium

Hurricane-proofed downtown skyscrapers unexpectedly vulnerable to ‘bouncing’ winds

Microcomb chips help pave the way for thousand times more accurate GPS systems

Illuminating the proton’s inner workings

Genetic therapy gives infants life-changing improvements in sight

Impacts of workplace bullying on sleep can be “contagious” between partners

UK peatland fires are supercharging carbon emissions as climate change causes hotter, drier summers

Coastal erosion threatens this ancient city — and others much closer to home

Walgreens supports the American Heart Association to bring CPR to communities nationwide

How mosquitos hear may inspire new ways to detect natural disasters

Child ADHD risk linked to mother’s use of acetaminophen

New solution to help therapy ‘dropouts’

New AI system accurately maps urban green spaces, exposing environmental divides

Gordon Keller receives the 2025 ISSCR Achievement Award for his seminal work in regenerative medicine

Yonatan Stelzer earns the 2025 ISSCR Outstanding Young Investigator Award for his breakthrough approaches to addressing fundamental problems in mammalian development

Ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine prescriptions during the COVID-19 pandemic soared far above pre-pandemic levels

3D lung model raises the bar for research

Lehigh Engineering faculty named Senior Members of the National Academy of Inventors

Researchers outline new approach for better understanding animal consciousness

Bioinspired robot collectives that can act like solids or fluids on demand

AI-assisted diagnosis for immunological disease

A new approach for breaking plastic waste down to monomers

High-performance computing at a crossroads

Chemists find greener path to making key industrial chemical

Giant X-ray facility shows that magnets can reduce flaws in 3D printed components

Cooling materials – Out of the 3D printer

New knowledge portal adiposetissue.org enhances obesity and metabolism research with centralized data

Study suggests new molecular strategy for treating fragile X syndrome

Digging into a decades-old hepatitis B mystery suggests a new potential treatment

[Press-News.org] CRISPR manipulates plants’ flower powers