MURFREESBORO, Tenn. —
Published MTSU student-led research on grapes could have applications
within the commercial wine industry as the university continues expanding its
impact on this field of study.
Biology professor John DuBois smiles when he considers
the impact alumna Amanda Uhls of
Hendersonville, Tennessee, Nathan Jolley
of Pegram, Tennessee, and Aimee Wilson
of Murfreesboro have made with their research, which was published.
All were part of Undergraduate
Research Experience and Creative Activity, or URECA, and accompanying grants they received. URECA falls under the
Undergraduate
Research Center on campus and research is conducted in all colleges,
not just the sciences.
Uhls and Jolley collaborated with mentors DuBois and School
of Agriculture professor Tony
Johnston on a project regarding the Norton/Cynthiana grape variety native
to North America and utilized in the commercial wine industry. Their findings
were published March 30 by Food and Nutritional Sciences Journal.
“The research of these students was essential to gaining an
understanding of the propagation (starting new vines) for this grape,” DuBois
said.
For Johnston, the director of the second-year fermentation science
program, this line of research has “turned in my mind for more than 25 years.”
“I learned about the
difficulty in propagating this grape in graduate school and was amazed by its
resilience and value for production in regions where there is high pest
pressure and humidity, such as here in Tennessee,” said Johnston. “I’m
extremely pleased that we’re finally beginning to understand both how to
propagate the grape better and why the variety is so resistant to diseases.”
DuBois said Wilson’s research “has helped us to generate tissue
culture that is free of the fungus that lives inside the grapevine. This opens
the way toward propagating this grape using biotechnology (generating plantlets
in a Petri dish). Amanda’s and Nolan’s research told us that this grape does
not propagate well at the traditional times used in grape propagation.”
Jolley said his role in this project was to reinforce Uhls’ findings. For an entire
year, she made biweekly trips to a Norton/Cynthiana vineyard to take cuttings.
Uhls found that cuttings taken in June exhibited the highest rates of
propagation.
“The year after Amanda had conducted
her work, I visited the same vineyard weekly to take cuttings from April to
October to corroborate her results,” Jolley said.
“All three students did exceptional work on their projects,”
DuBois added. “It was an honor to be able to work with them.”
Wilson, joined by Matthew
Fuller, Shannon Smith and
Johnston and DuBois, also studied the same grape, particularly its low success
rate at certain times of the year. The 13-page result was published in the Oct.
25, 2016, Agricultural Sciences Journal.
“This publication will open a lot of doors,” said Wilson, a
native of Kingston, Tennessee. She is considering medical school or performing
more research while pursuing her doctorate.
Uhls said she was really
excited when she finished her thesis research “because I had an entire year’s
worth of work to show for it. I had officially accomplished something that no
one else (at least no one who had published anything) had done before. The
feeling was incredible.”
Uhls added she’s “so
thankful for the experience I got and for Dr. DuBois for sticking it out every
time I complained about getting ‘no’ results. As for it being published, I
still can’t believe that’s real. My name, first, on an international
publication. There’s no feeling like it.”
Wendi Watts is the URECA coordinator. For more information,
call 615-904-8040 or email ureca@mtsu.edu.
Other URECA-awarded research
efforts
• Maia Council —
Posters at the Capitol (“Recovering Nashville’s Past”); mentored by history
assistant professor Molly Taylor-Poleskey.
• Brooke Fitzwater
— Fulbright semifinalist and Posters at the Capitol participant, with multiple
URECA awards 2016-18 for three projects including a visual catalog of the
Stones River system fishes this year; mentored by biology professor Dennis Mullen.
• Natalie Foulks
— Posters at the Capitol project (“Narrative Discourse in Older Adults”);
mentored by health and human performance assistant professor Kathryn Blankenship.
• Lauren Hennessee
and Janie Kullmar — Posters at the
Capitol (“Word Learning in Authentic Versus Explicit Conditions”); both
mentored by Blankenship.
• Madyson Middleton
— College of Basic and Applied Sciences’ first place in Scholars Week
universitywide poster exposition for project (“Synthesis and MIC Testing of
Antifungal Peptoids Against Cryptococcus”); mentored by chemistry assistant
professor Kevin Bicker.
• Salman Rahmani
— Posters at the Capitol for two projects including “Aerodynamic and Acoustic
Analysis of a Barn Owl Biomimetic Airfoil” in fall 2017; mentored by aerospace
associate professor Nate Callender.
• Kyeesha Wilcox
— College of Liberal Arts’ third place in Scholars Week universitywide expo for
project (“Assessing Type 2 Diabetes Risk Perception Among College Students and
Creating Health Education Tools Using the Health Belief Mode”); mentored by
health and human performance assistant professor Bethany Wrye.
• Benjamin Yost —
Posters at the Capitol project (“Understanding the Modern Stage of
International Adoption”); mentored by global studies and human geography
interim chair David Carleton.
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. —
Published MTSU student-led research on grapes could have applications
within the commercial wine industry as the university continues expanding its
impact on this field of study.
Biology professor John DuBois smiles when he considers
the impact alumna Amanda Uhls of
Hendersonville, Tennessee, Nathan Jolley
of Pegram, Tennessee, and Aimee Wilson
of Murfreesboro have made with their research, which was published.
All were part of Undergraduate
Research Experience and Creative Activity, or URECA, and accompanying grants they received. URECA falls under the
Undergraduate
Research Center on campus and research is conducted in all colleges,
not just the sciences.
Uhls and Jolley collaborated with mentors DuBois and School
of Agriculture professor Tony
Johnston on a project regarding the Norton/Cynthiana grape variety native
to North America and utilized in the commercial wine industry. Their findings
were published March 30 by Food and Nutritional Sciences Journal.
“The research of these students was essential to gaining an
understanding of the propagation (starting new vines) for this grape,” DuBois
said.
For Johnston, the director of the second-year fermentation science
program, this line of research has “turned in my mind for more than 25 years.”
“I learned about the
difficulty in propagating this grape in graduate school and was amazed by its
resilience and value for production in regions where there is high pest
pressure and humidity, such as here in Tennessee,” said Johnston. “I’m
extremely pleased that we’re finally beginning to understand both how to
propagate the grape better and why the variety is so resistant to diseases.”
DuBois said Wilson’s research “has helped us to generate tissue
culture that is free of the fungus that lives inside the grapevine. This opens
the way toward propagating this grape using biotechnology (generating plantlets
in a Petri dish). Amanda’s and Nolan’s research told us that this grape does
not propagate well at the traditional times used in grape propagation.”
Jolley said his role in this project was to reinforce Uhls’ findings. For an entire
year, she made biweekly trips to a Norton/Cynthiana vineyard to take cuttings.
Uhls found that cuttings taken in June exhibited the highest rates of
propagation.
“The year after Amanda had conducted
her work, I visited the same vineyard weekly to take cuttings from April to
October to corroborate her results,” Jolley said.
“All three students did exceptional work on their projects,”
DuBois added. “It was an honor to be able to work with them.”
Wilson, joined by Matthew
Fuller, Shannon Smith and
Johnston and DuBois, also studied the same grape, particularly its low success
rate at certain times of the year. The 13-page result was published in the Oct.
25, 2016, Agricultural Sciences Journal.
“This publication will open a lot of doors,” said Wilson, a
native of Kingston, Tennessee. She is considering medical school or performing
more research while pursuing her doctorate.
Uhls said she was really
excited when she finished her thesis research “because I had an entire year’s
worth of work to show for it. I had officially accomplished something that no
one else (at least no one who had published anything) had done before. The
feeling was incredible.”
Uhls added she’s “so
thankful for the experience I got and for Dr. DuBois for sticking it out every
time I complained about getting ‘no’ results. As for it being published, I
still can’t believe that’s real. My name, first, on an international
publication. There’s no feeling like it.”
Wendi Watts is the URECA coordinator. For more information,
call 615-904-8040 or email ureca@mtsu.edu.
Other URECA-awarded research
efforts
• Maia Council —
Posters at the Capitol (“Recovering Nashville’s Past”); mentored by history
assistant professor Molly Taylor-Poleskey.
• Brooke Fitzwater
— Fulbright semifinalist and Posters at the Capitol participant, with multiple
URECA awards 2016-18 for three projects including a visual catalog of the
Stones River system fishes this year; mentored by biology professor Dennis Mullen.
• Natalie Foulks
— Posters at the Capitol project (“Narrative Discourse in Older Adults”);
mentored by health and human performance assistant professor Kathryn Blankenship.
• Lauren Hennessee
and Janie Kullmar — Posters at the
Capitol (“Word Learning in Authentic Versus Explicit Conditions”); both
mentored by Blankenship.
• Madyson Middleton
— College of Basic and Applied Sciences’ first place in Scholars Week
universitywide poster exposition for project (“Synthesis and MIC Testing of
Antifungal Peptoids Against Cryptococcus”); mentored by chemistry assistant
professor Kevin Bicker.
• Salman Rahmani
— Posters at the Capitol for two projects including “Aerodynamic and Acoustic
Analysis of a Barn Owl Biomimetic Airfoil” in fall 2017; mentored by aerospace
associate professor Nate Callender.
• Kyeesha Wilcox
— College of Liberal Arts’ third place in Scholars Week universitywide expo for
project (“Assessing Type 2 Diabetes Risk Perception Among College Students and
Creating Health Education Tools Using the Health Belief Mode”); mentored by
health and human performance assistant professor Bethany Wrye.
• Benjamin Yost —
Posters at the Capitol project (“Understanding the Modern Stage of
International Adoption”); mentored by global studies and human geography
interim chair David Carleton.
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