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Dixon Listed among Top 15 Plant Researchers - Press Release, 2002
Media advisory
issued April 4, 2002, effective immediately.
For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Dixon Listed among Top 15 Plant Researchers Worldwide
Ardmore-based researcher among top cited scientists in world
ARDMORE, Okla. The director
of the Noble Foundation's Plant Biology Division will be recognized as one of
the top 15 plant researchers cited worldwide during an awards gala reception
in New Orleans on April 22.
Richard A. Dixon, Ph.D., was listed
among the top plant science researchers by ISI, inventors of the Web site evaluation
tool, ISI Essential Science IndicatorsSM, which was used to identify
the top-ranking scientists. The tool permits users to rank the performance of
scientists, institutions such as universities, corporations and government laboratories,
countries and journals by 22 specific fields. The Indicators ranking is based
on total citations to papers indexed from 1991 through October 2001. Also ranked
were the top 15 animal science researchers.
"I am both flattered and honored
by this award," said Dixon. "It is good to know that the work you
do is being read and considered important by others. The excellent support for
my work from the Noble Foundation has enabled me to put together the body of
work on which this award was based. I have also been blessed with wonderfully
talented postdoctoral fellows, technicians and collaborators."
Dixon's laboratory research centers
on understanding how plants produce natural products, and how this understanding
can be applied to generate improved plants. Especially of interest are three
major classes of natural products: 1) isoflavonoids, which help protect the
plant from fungal infection and may have beneficial health effects for humans
as well; 2) triterpenes, complex biosynthetic pathways of certain compounds
that act as antifeedants and can seriously affect forage quality, but which
also have displayed potent anticancer activity; and 3) lignin, a cell-wall polymer
that negatively affects digestibility of forage legumes and grasses. Through
his research, Dixon has shown that genetic modification of lignin content and
composition can improve forage digestibility for livestock.
"I see important applications
of this work for increasing crop yields through improved disease resistance
and providing a true scientific basis for human preventative medicine based
on dietary intake," said Dixon.
The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation,
Inc., is a nonprofit organization founded in 1945. Besides providing globally-recognized
plant biology research and housing the Center for Medicago Genomics Research,
the Foundation includes agricultural consultation services and field research,
specified granting opportunities and forage biotechnology research.
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Photos:
Dr. Richard Dixon (540k jpeg)
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, visit the Noble Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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