PERTH: Australian scientists have found a gene in native tobacco plant Nicotiana benthamiana which they assert will open the door for space-based food creation.
Researchers discovered through their study the tobacco plant, known as Pitjuri to native Aboriginal tribes, has lived in its present form in the wild for approximately 750,000 years. Researchers were looking for a reply to the inquiry of how did the plant manage to live for such a long time in its initial type.
Researchers looked through historical records to ascertain the first plant came from the Granites place close to the Western Australia and Northern Territory boundary and sequenced the genome of the plant. This conclusion led researchers to the solution of the survival tactics of the plant.
The team found that plant was focusing on getting these seeds back into the earth in time for the following rain and on creating little blooms but big seeds. This approach has been adopted by the plant as a way to resist drought and endure through generations.
Professor Peter Waterhouse, a plant geneticist at Queensland University of Technology said scientists could use this discovery to investigate clean growing surroundings or other market where plants were protected from disorder – and space was an interesting alternative.
“Scientists are now able to understand the best way to turn other species into “nude mice” for research functions. So just as nude mice might be extremely great models for cancer research, “naked” variations of harvest plants may additionally speed up agricultural research,” Professor said.