BUSINESS Presenting the Chrysler LHS. Imagine a car that combines the performance of a sports car and the comfort of a luxury sedan. That car is the Chrysler LHS. Four-wheel disc antilock brakes , computerized low-speed traction control and driver and front passenger airbags.* What else can be asked of a car? Over 56 in-stock for immediate delivery. CHRYSLER Pl ym ou t h 41■- CHRYSLER • PLYMOUTH 24315 H gerty Road • Between Ten Mile and Grand River • Novi (810) 476-7900 Market Fact m ore than two-thirds of employed Jewish News subscribers are in professional or managerial positions. Job Title Top management (president, CEO, chairman, partner, etc. 24% Other top management positions 46% Source: 1993 Simmons Jewish News Study 40 THE JEWISH NEWS Better Plants For Arid Sectors Rehovot, Israel —Agricultural crops resistant to strong sun- light may one day be cultivated in some of the hottest and most drought-ridden parts of the world thanks to recent findings of Weizmann Institute re- searchers, summarized in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. The scientists have unrav- eled the protective mechanism allowing a particularly sturdy salt-water algae to thrive in scoring sunlight. In the future, it may be possible to manipu- late a similar mechanism in higher plants, including crops, in order to enhance their resis- tance to the sun, according to Professor Ada Zamir of the In- stitute's Department of Bio- chemistry. The mechanism was deci- phered by Professor Zamir together with department members Haim Levy, Tamar Tal, Dr. Aviv Shaish, Dr. Irena Gokhman and Dr. Amnon Lers. The researchers studied the sun-protection mechanism in Dunaliella bardawil, a micro- scopic algae that grows in salty waters. The single-cell organ- ism is known for its legendary resistance to the salt and sun, which allows it to thrive in the brackish marshes of the Sinai desert and even in the Dead Sea. The algae was first isolat- ed from the Bardawil marsh in Sinai by the late Institute Pro- fessor Mordhay Avron, who pi- oneered the study of its unique properties. The Dunaliella algae fasci- nates scientists because it is both a remarkable survivor and functionally very similar to higher plants. These two prop- erties make it an excellent model for studying survival strategies that may be relevant for growing useful crops under harsh conditions, according to Professor Zamir. Excessive sunlight causes most plants to produce toxic oxygen molecules that damage and eventually destroy the plant's photosynthetic machin- ery. Professor Zamir and her as- sociates have discovered a protein, now known as Cbr, that is formed whenever this ma- chinery is threatened. Using methods of genetic engineering, the researchers have cloned the gene coding of this protein. They have further observed a close link between Cbr and a carotenoid pigment called zeax- anthin, also formed under the stressful conditions of intense light. The scientists have reached the conclusion that pro- tein binds with the pigment to Prof. Ada Zamir form a light-protective "anten- na" or "lightning rod," which di- verts the excessive, harmful light from the sensitive compo- nents of the photosynthetic ma- chinery. At the same time the algae is producing Cbr and zeaxinthin, it forms large quan- tities of beta-carotene, an or- ange pigment that also serves as the plant's natural sun- screen. While in Dunaliella this re- sponse is most dramatic, light- protective "antennae" formed The algae forms a pigment which is the plant's natural sunscreen. by zeaxanthin and proteins sim- ilar to Cbr operate in most — and perhaps all — higher plants. Now that the mecha- nism of this natural "sunscreen" is understood, it may be possi- ble to enhance it in agriculural crops. Professor Zamir holds the Carl and Dorothy Bennett Chair of Biochemistry. The re- search was supported by grants from the Minerva and the Ger- man-Israel Foundations. The Weizmann Institute of Science, in Rehovot, Israel, is one of the world's foremost cen- ters of scientific research and graduate study. Its 2,300 sci- entists, students, technicians and engineers pursue basic re- search in the quest for knowl- edge and the enhancement of the human condition. New ways of fighting disease and hunger, protecting the envi- ronment, and harnessing al- ternative sources of energy are high priorities. I I