Switchgrass engineered to be more suitable for sugar extraction

September 10, 2012 |

In California, switchgrass has been successfully engineered to remain in a juvenile state with no flowers or seeds, thus making the plant more desirable as a feedstock. Geneticists from University of California, Berkeley and the USDA by inserting a new gene that keeps the plant from flowering and keeps the leaves softer, enabling sugar to be processed more easily.

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Category: Research

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