Associate Professor, Applied BioSciences - GIDP | Member of the Graduate Faculty | Associate Professor, Genetics - GIDP | Associate Professor, BIO5 Institute | Associate Professor, Plant Science
Monica Schmidt is an Associate Professor in the School of Plant Sciences in the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences at the University of Arizona. Dr. Schmidt’s research interests are in both functional foods and functional genomics. Her research aims at applying molecular biology and genetic techniques to helalleviate current major agricultural problems. As soybean is a global commodity, much of her research focuses on soybean seed traits. Current research is investigating cellular mechanisms to strengthen the metabolic engineering efforts to fortify crops with nutraceutical carotenoids. Since soybean oil is a large component of the American diet, Dr. Schmidt is also investigating means to engineer a more healthy oil composition. Other functional food projects aim at the suppression of deleterious compounds in crops, such as toxins produced from contaminating fungus, in maize and peanuts. She uses techniques of plant biotechnology in over a dozen crops to investigate gene function, at a cellular and entire plant level. Dr. Schmidt has worked with both domestic and international collaborators on value-added traits in seeds of legumes for over a decade and is one of the few academic laboratories that can routinely transform soybean. She has been involved with a number of innovations in tissue culture transformation techniques for example, maturation media for soybean, novel gene expression cassette system) and her research on seed manipulation has resulted in a start-ucompany and patents. Keywords: plant biotechnology, functional foods, soybean, maize