Sources:
Susan Brown, 785-532-3935, sjbrown@k-state.edu;
Rob Denell, 785-532-6670, rdenell@k-state.edu;
Richard Beeman, 785-776-2710, rwbeeman@k-state.edu
Note to editors: For a photo of a red flour beetle, call 785-532-6415
News release prepared by: Marcia Locke, 785-532-6705, marcia@k-state.edu
Tuesday,
October 21, 2003
K-STATE
SCIENTISTS' BEETLE CHOSEN FOR NATIONAL GENOME SEQUENCING PROJECT
MANHATTAN
-- The red flour beetle can be a pest in massive grain elevators or
in the 5-pound sack of flour in your kitchen. But it also can be an
important organism in the field of genetic research.
As
the result of research performed by scientists from Kansas State University
and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Grain Marketing and Production
Research Center in Manhattan, the red flour beetle has been selected
from a long list of nominated organisms for genome sequencing by the
National Human Genome Research Institute, an arm of the National Institutes
of Health.
As
in the case of the human genome, the description of the entire genetic
information of the red flour beetle will facilitate a number of important
new experimental approaches, according to Susan Brown, associate professor
of biology at K-State and principal investigator for the red flour beetle
genome project.
Co-investigators
on the project include Rob Denell, university distinguished professor
of biology and director of the Terry C. Johnson Center for Basic Cancer
Research, and Richard Beeman, adjunct professor of entomology at K-State
and a research entomologist at the U.S. Grain Marketing and Production
Research Center.
According
to Brown, K-State's selection follows many years of work to expand upon
the usefulness of the flour beetle for genetic research. She said the
beetle is now used in studies ranging from control of embryonic development
to strategies for controlling harmful insects.
"With
completion of the human genome project, the National Human Genome Research
Institute has a great deal of sequencing capacity at its disposal, and
has been establishing priorities for sequencing other organisms,"
Brown said. "Other animals given high priority for genome sequencing
during the past year and a half include the chimpanzee, chicken, cow
and dog. Clearly, we are in important company."
The
multimillion dollar commitment by the National Human Genome Research
Institute will be accompanied by a $200,000 contribution from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. The funds will be given to one of the national
sequencing centers, which will then forward the sequence data to the
researchers in Manhattan. The researchers will interpret the data and
make the information available to the scientific community via the World
Wide Web.
Kansas State University
is a comprehensive, research, land-grant institution first serving students
and the people of Kansas, and also the nation and the world.