cxLi Lab @ MSU Plant Bio
Our current carbon economy relies on fossil fuels, from which we isolate small organic molecules to produce medicines, plastics, cosmetic, or other chemicals that we use everyday. However, sustainability requires a more biomass-based carbon economy, where we engineer plants to produce precursor molecules, which can then be assembled to desired chemicals that we use daily. Plants have evolved an amazing diversity of metabolites, but these metabolites are not produced in every cell of the plant. Therefore, it is essential to understand how plants can express different metabolic pathways across different organs, tissues, and even cell types. We are interested in the following questions:
- How are metabolic pathways (especially specialized metabolism) controlled by cell fate?
- How can we reprogram plant cell fates for biomanufacturing?
- How can we toggle between differentiated cell states for metabolic engineering and totipotent cell state for genetic engineering?

- Left: A Catharanthus roseus (Madagascar Periwinkle) plant, the source of chemotherapeutic medicine vinblastine.
- Middle: Catharanthus petals on tissue culture, transiently expressing a green fluorescent protein.
- Right: Kalanchoe daigremontiana (Mother of Thousands) plant. Small plantlets (foliar embryos) can be seen on the edges of leaves.

Publications: Google Scholar |
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