Laboratory of R. Malcolm Brown, Jr.
Johnson & Johnson Centennial Chair in Plant Cell Biology
Section of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology
School of Biological Sciences
The University of Texas at Austin
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Coming Soon!

Our new webpage devoted to

algal and cyanobacterial feedstocks for biofuels! Stay tuned!

a link will soon be created HERE

Recently Published:

Cellulose: Molecular and Structural Biology
Selected articles on the synthesis, structure, and applications of cellulose
Edited by R.M. Brown, Jr. and I.M. Saxena
Springer, 2007 (Publisher's web site)

 

New!

pdf files of the R.M. Brown Reprint Library

Now Complete

1962-2007

click below to enter

Publication List


A New View of the Rosette TC!

click on the photo below 

This is an anaglyph which shows a 3D View if you use red/blue glasses!

This photo was made by my graduate student, Andrew Bowling. It is an image of a newly recovered tobacco BY2 protoplast.  The inner surface of the plasma membrane is shown, along with cellulose microfibrils, clathrin-coated vesicles, and microtubules. For more information, click on the photo above and view the site!
 

Electronic Paper Invention!

(click on photo below to learn more!)


 


The New Cellulose Electronic Network (CEN)
Click on photo icon below to enter and beta-test our "revitalized" CEN
This site has been completely redesigned by Richard Santos
Your comments would be much appreciated
send comments to: rsantos@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu
We plan to have the revised CEN online and fully operational by June 1, 2002


 


A  research database for genes covering processive B-glycosyltransferases
This new database was designed and and assembled by David Nobles. The Brown lab is pleased to announce
the inaguration of this database which should compliment the cell wall database at Stanford.
Your comments are welcome: dnobles@mail.utexas.edu



 


Cellulose in Cyanobacteria!
Click on the Photo Icon above  to learn more about this interesting research discovery in our lab.


photo courtesy Bob Nagy

Professor Brown's research laboratory is best known for the discovery of cellulose synthesizing complexes in the 1970’s and much of the subsequent development of this field. This research came out of a long tradition in the Brown group of extensive experience with transmission electron microscopy and the freeze fracture technique .

In the late 1980’s the Brown group pioneered in the purification and characterization of cellulose synthase from the gram negative bacterium, Acetobacter xylinum . This led to the first cloning and sequencing of a cellulose synthase gene in 1990.

More recently, however, the Brown group has undertaken to characterize cellulose biosynthesis in eukaryotic cells, particularly those from plants of great agronomic importance. In 1993, the Brown group achieved substantial purification and characterization of cellulose synthase from Gossypium, and more recently, the group has been the first to produce cellulose I in vitro from partially purified membrane proteins of Gossypium. In addition, a novel synthetic approach to cellulose synthesis was recently achieved using an endoglucanase as the catalyst in an organic solvent (click HERE for the abstract and source).

In 2000, the Brown lab succeeded in growing cotton fibers in ovule culture but in addition to growth on the aerial side of a floating ovule, fibers were produced in the submerged portion. Interesting morphologies of secondary wall helical thickenings were observerd. A news release on this discovery has shown that this new method for cotton growth that could lead to  improved textiles. Being able to grow cotton in submerged culture has allowed direct analyis of cell movements, growth, etc. Two movies are available for observations and analysis.
 

The Brown labgroup also is focusing on the purification of cellulose synthases and the identification of the cellulose synthase gene/s from Arabidopsis and Vigna with the hopes to better understand the complex biochemical regulation of cellulose and callose biosynthesis in land plants.

The Brown group also has pioneered in atomic and molecular imaging using the transmission electron microscope. The group was the first to secure lattice images of glucan chains from the cellulose of a higher plant. This effort has led to more generalized beam-sensitive sample for imaging, and now the group is imaging molecules such as DNA, bacitracin, ornithine decarboxylase, chaperonin, and the acetylcholine receptor as well as the adhesion molecules of marine diatoms.

In collaboration with Professor Richard Lagow, the Brown Lab is investigating a new form of condensed carbon which we have named, Carbon megatubes . A publication will appear on this shortly.

With Professor Tetsuo Kondo of Tsukuba, Japan, we are investigating the structure and properties of a new form of cellulose known as nematic ordered cellulose .


Prospective Graduate Students!
If you are interested in an excellent opportunity here at UT-Austin, consider our
IGERT Program In Optical Biomedical Engineering

I am a co-PI on this project and have graduate students in this area. I also teach a graduate
course in Laboratory Methods in Cell Biology (Biology 393L)

I am also interested in prospective graduate students who want to investigate the biochemistry, molecular biology and structure of cellulose in all of its forms

Click on the Icon Below to Learn More about this "cool" program!


 

Professor Brown's Bio 323L/Bot 393L Class Pages

Professor Brown's Homepage

Information On RMB Lab Group Members   (Includes  section on past lab associates.)

Ongoing Research in the RMB Lab

Research Support Acknowledgements

Brown Lab's Publication List (Go here to view or download articles.)

Brown Lab's Anticipated or In Press Publication List (Go here to view or download articles.)

Photo Tour of the RMB Lab  (Take a walk through Painter Hall!)

Movies and 3-D Imaging Projects From The Brown Lab

The NANO Page! (Exciting research using the TEM at atomic and molecular levels of resolution)

Talks Papers, and Images to Download
 
 







NEW! Click on Photo Icon above to download a paper published 10 years ago Algae as tools in studying the biosynthesis of cellulose,nature's most abundant macromolecule.  This work describes the use of algae as tools in the study of cellulose. Some very interesting phylogentic predictions on the evolution of cellulose biogenesis from the first cell, to the role of cellulose biosynthesis in understanding the evolution of land plants. Chara and Nitella have solitary rosette TCs which places them squarely in the pathway towards land plant evolution. Coleochaete has a novel octagonal rosette TC making it somewhat different and possibly further related to land plants. In this paper, the single row of TC subunits in Dictyostelium was first revealed.



"Biogenesis of Natural Polymer Systems with Special Reference to Cellulose Assembly and Deposition"  A complete Review by R. Malcolm Brown, Jr. published in 1978. ( kindly reproduced in its entirety with permission of Philip Morris)



A Position Paper by R. Malcolm Brown, Jr."Microbial Cellulose: A New Resource for Wood, Paper, Textiles, Food and Specialty Products"



"Cellulose Biosyntheis in Higher Plants" Our latest review which appeared in Trends in Plant Science



Our  paper which has appeared in the journal, Cellulose,    " Identification of celluose synthase(s) in higher plants: Sequence analysis of processive beta-glycosyltransferases with the common motif "D,D,D35Q(R,Q)XRW"



A talk by Professor Brown on "Connecting Science: Critical Ingredients, Impact on our Future" given before the Science Teachers Association of Texas (STAT) convention in Austin, Texas on November 1, 1996 (with accompanying slides).

  A poster by Inder M. Saxena and R. Malcolm Brown, Jr.   Genetic Analysis of Cellulose Biosynthesis in Acetobacter xylinum: Implications for Cellulose Crystallization   I

stay tuned, many more papers will soon be added!

 
 

Panoramic view of our light microscope facility. Left to right: Leitz micromanipulation station; Optronix and Panasonic video station; Zeiss Universal microscope; Dell Computer station with IP Plus and KS-400 software; Zeiss stereoscopic binocular microscope station; Zeiss inverted microscope station; Zeiss Photomicroscope set up with Jamin Lebedef interference optics; Pixera video station and computer monitor. All microscopes on condition power supplies. HEPA filters, and individual lighting controls at each microscope console unit. As many as 5 researchers can use this facility simultaneously. All major Zeiss optics for microscopy are available. Pan images made using Olympus C-2000z Digital camera and QuickStitch 360 Digital stiching software.


Real cotton seeds and their fibers at maturity represent each of the rosette terminal complex subunits. The rosette TC is the enzyme complex responsible for cellulose biosynthesis in vascular plants, first described by  Mueller and Brown in 1980.

 Comments? We would like to hear from you!   Email Here!

The background of this page is a cellulosic scale synthesized in the Golgi apparatus of the marine alga, Pleurochysis scherfelii (Photo- courtesy Dr. Dwight Romanovicz)

  


Updated April 24, 2008  by R. Malcolm Brown, Jr.