Sources:
Susan Brown, 785-532-3935, sjbrown@k-state.edu;
Rob Denell, 785-532-6670, rdenell@k-state.edu;
Richard Beeman, 785-532-2710, rwbeeman@k-state.edu
Note to editors: Electronic photos available by calling 785-532-6415
Pronouncer: Denell is De-NELL
News release prepared by: Marcia Locke, 785-532-6705
Tuesday,
June 1, 2004
K-STATE
RESEARCHERS SHARE $1 MILLION GRANT TO STUDY INSECT PESTS
MANHATTAN
-- Researchers at Kansas State University and in Germany have received
a four-year, $1 million award from the U.S. Department of Agriculture
to perform studies designed to aid in the control of agronomically-important
insect pests.
The
study is being led by Susan J. Brown, associate professor of biology
at K-State. Other participating research groups are being led by Rob
Denell, K-State university distinguished professor of biology and director
of the Terry C. Johnson Center for Basic Cancer Research; Richard Beeman,
adjunct professor of entomology at K-State and research entomologist
at the U.S. Grain Marketing and Production Research Center in Manhattan;
and scientists in Gottingen and Erlangen, Germany.
"This
research, which utilizes the red flour beetle, a pest of stored grain
and grain products, will involve a special genetic element that can
be made to 'hop' to new locations in the beetle chromosomes, thereby
causing new gene mutations and identifying regions important for directing
patterns of gene activity," Brown said.
The
study has potential to form the basis of new strategies of insect control,
as well as important advances in understanding insect genetics and development,
Brown said.
The
K-State research team recently won approval from the National Human
Genome Research Institute, an arm of the National Institutes of Health,
to have the beetle's genome sequenced. This process is under way.
Brown
said both beetle projects will further enhance the use of the insect
for a variety of basic and applied research studies.
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.