Author Archives: hlaw

Who’s afraid of germs? Apparently, plants are.

Researchers at UBC’s Michael Smith labs have identified a crucial gene that regulates the immune response in plants. Yes you heard correctly, the plant immune system.

Because we live the majority of our lives in cities, where the only thing we see wrong with plants is the burnt lawns in August, we could be excused for not knowing that plants can ‘get the flu’. But it’s true, plants get sick much like we do, with similarities down to the molecular scale.

Source: Wikimedia Commons

 This is the expertise of Dr. Li’s lab; paving the way to mapping the immune system of plants. This is no easy task. Teasing out the relationships between the dozens of genes responsible for plant immunity a like trying to put together a jigsaw puzzle blindfolded, not knowing what the assembled picture will look like. Recently however, they have published a paper that puts a piece solidly into place.

They have identified the gene that regulates the immune response by adjusting how NLR’s (an important class of immune receptors) are regulated. The gene, called CPR1, is part of a class of proteins that is involved in ubiquitination, which is the way all multicellular organisms ‘tag’ the proteins that need to be disposed of.

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This unfolding field of research is being spearheaded right here in UBC as well as in collaboration with teams from Beijing’s National Institute of Biological Sciences and Duke University. And although plant pathology is often overshadowed by its more charismatic, better-funded cousin, the study of the animal immune system, it’s by no means less important.

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 Music: Ergo Phizmiz – Papageno Drunk. Creative Commons.

So if we can get the plant to do the heavy lifting by making a protein that could adjust how hard the plant fights against a certain pathogen, we may eventually move away from using chemical control techniques that are often toxic to farmers and consumers alike.

Although it’s nice to imagine a bright tomorrow where all food crops will be perfectly immune against any blight that comes their way, we have to face the facts. In order for us to have our “Jetsons” dream come true, basic research must come first.

After all, as Dr. Li notes, even Albert Einstein didn’t realize that research on the atom could someday lead to atomic weaponry.  So we have no sound way to tell what fruits this research will bear in the future. Let’s hope that the next generation of scientists will only weaponize our crops metaphorically speaking.

 

 

The Chinese Nuclear Apocalypse

As far as Chinese farmers in regions neighboring Beijing are considered,  the nuclear apocalypse has already begun. It is becoming common knowledge that smog in many of China’s major cities is growing rapidly out of control. However, the severity of the situation is so great that the effects on China’s agriculture is resembling that of a nuclear winter. Due to the thick smog cover, plant growth has started to become drastically hindered. When seeds of the same plant were grown in a lab under artificial lighting and in a greenhouse farm, the lab-grown seeds took 20 days to grow whilst the latter group of seeds took over two months. Such light-deprived is unsustainable for growth, and a further degradation of the conditions could lead to dire consequences for an agricultural industry constituting 10% of the GDP of a nation home to over 1.6 billion people.

Wheat farmer in fog-covered field. Photo Credit: Xinhua

China is one of the world’s largest export manufacturers; 65% of its energy is fueled by coal. It is not surprising, then, that a combination of massive energy use and lack of significant government action that the conditions have become so toxic. In fact, the smog has even begun drifting to other countries, most notably settling into Japan a week ago, as well as Korea and as far as Los Angeles. Although fairly weak relative to the smog levels experienced in Beijing, the smog that reached Japan still contained 50% more airborne particulate matter than is considered safe by the World Health Organization; levels in China have reached as much as 15 times the safe level. Whilst questionable policy enforcement on its own soil is already a major issue, spreading smog may add fuel to already-tense Sino-Japanese relations, worsening the situation further.

Chinese smog as seen from satellite. Photo Credit: NASA Goddard Photo and Video

As I noted in my presentation in class several weeks ago, one of the proposed solutions in combating the smog issue was the implementation of super-sized sprinklers on top of all major skyscrapers and high-rises so as to physically wash the smog away; this is theorized to be able to reduce the amount of smog to safe levels in a matter of days or weeks. Another, more outlandish proposal involves the creation of massive, inflatable bubble-like structures to encompass parks and gardens and form a refuge for citizens seeking a reprieve from the increasingly toxic air. However, such a method would cost substantially more money, would not address the amount of smog, and, given the extreme rich/poor divide in China, potentially lead to an Elyisum-reminiscent situation.

The Eden Project in the UK, similar to the proposed structures in China. Photo Credit: Jack Two

Regardless of the path down which China decides to tackle its ever-increasing problem, it is imperative that they act swiftly. As their agriculture is more and more affected, other aspects of their economy will likely falter as well and, given the intertwined nature of the global economy, a relatively simply pollution problem may soon have worldwide consequences.

-Helon Law.