|
Noble Appoints Adjunct Professor - Press Release, 2000
News release issued November 20, 2000, effective immediately.
Noble
Foundation Appoints Meinke First Adjunct Professor ARDMORE,
Okla. Future research on forage legumes and grasses, as well as plants
grown for human consumption, will benefit from new interactions between plant
biologists at the Ardmore-based Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation and Oklahoma State
University's Department of Botany. A
noted OSU plant scientist has become the first Adjunct Professor of the Noble
Foundation's Plant Biology Division, serving as an advisor for the Division's
growing Medicago truncatula functional genomics program. Dr. David Meinke
has worked for the past 25 years to establish Arabidopsis thaliana, a plant
with a simple genome, as a model species for research in plant molecular genetics.
That work melds closely with the Foundation's efforts to establish Medicago
truncatula, a plant that also has a small genome, as a model legume for genetic
studies. Medicago truncatula will be of particular value for studies on
nitrogen fixation, mycorrhizal associations, biosynthesis of certain classes of
natural products, and forage quality important plant traits for which Arabidopsis
is not a good model. "Dr.
Meinke is a highly respected scientist working on the identification of essential
genes for embryo development in the model plant Arabidopsis," said Dr.
Rick Dixon, director of the Noble Foundation Plant Biology Division. "He is one
of the major players in the Arabidopsis field, and his work has had broad
impact on our understanding of embryo development in plants, as well as promoting
the use of Arabidopsis as a model genetic species." The
Noble Foundation established its Medicago truncatula genomics program last
year and immediately set to work establishing resources to allow researchers worldwide
access to its gene sequence databases. The program integrates gene expression
profiling, proteomics and metabolic profiling, and is expected to make a significant
contribution to legume molecular biology on a global scale. It is intended that
biological material from the program will be distributed to scientists worldwide.
"The resulting multidisciplinary databases will be interfaced to provide scientists
with an integrated set of tools to address fundamental questions pertaining to
legume biology," said Dr. Greg May, NF Staff Scientist coordinating the Division's
Medicago program. Meinke,
Regents Professor of Botany at OSU-Stillwater, began working on the isolation
and characterization of embryo-defective mutants two and a half decades ago as
a graduate student at Yale University in the laboratory of Professor Ian Sussex.
The six mutants analyzed for his Ph.D. dissertation formed the basis for publications
on Arabidopsis as a model system for plant developmental genetics. Since
then, his lab has isolated and characterized more than 1500 embryo-defective mutants
of Arabidopsis, and many of these studies have appeared as seminal papers
in premiere scientific journals. Meinke
is enthusiastic about his new appointment. "These
are exciting times for basic research in molecular plant biology at the regional,
national, and international levels," he said. "I look forward to applying my research
experience with Arabidopsis to the development of another model system
with great potential for improving agriculture and human health. With continued
input from the Noble Foundation, Oklahoma has the potential become a leader in
this important area of modern biology." "We
are proud to have Dr. Meinke associated with the Plant Biology Division and look
forward to benefiting from his experience with model genetic systems," Dixon said. ### Photos:
Meinke-Color | Meinke-B/W
| Dixon-B/W The
Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit
organization conducting agricultural, forage biotechnological, and plant biology
research; providing grants to numerous non-profit charitable, educational and
health organizations; and assisting farmers and ranchers through educational and
consultative agricultural programs. To
learn more, check out the Noble Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available
at www.noble.org/Press_Release
|