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News

Wheat photo courtest of Keith/Ewing on flickr
Sunday, 24 May 2020

Researchers have a new understanding of the genetic makeup of a fungus that causes the disease Wheat Stripe Rust, one of the most destructive wheat diseases globally costing $1 billion annually.

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Tuesday, 03 Dec 2019

Research that could transform global rice production by increasing yields from the world’s number one food crop has been boosted by five more years of funding.

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Tuesday, 26 Nov 2019

Esteemed senior ANU biologist and mentor, Professor Barry Pogson, has been awarded the highest accolade for staff, the 2019 Peter Baume Award.

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Wheat
Saturday, 09 Nov 2019

Some clever detective work by an international team of scientists has uncovered how a deadly fungus - a stem rust called Ug99 - came about through some unusual breeding habits. The discovery will help protect wheat crops around the world from devastating fungal diseases.

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Dr Arun Yadav, from the ANU Research School of Biology
Wednesday, 16 Oct 2019

Australian research could help breeders develop more drought-resilient crops that can produce more food and more profit with less water.

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Professor Peter Solomon. Image Stuart Hay, ANU
Thursday, 19 Sep 2019

Researchers at The Australian National University (ANU) have shown how Australian wheat crops would cope if a destructive disease that’s yet to hit our shores ever made it into the country.

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Events

A woman smiling in a laboratory with shelves of chemical bottles behind her.
23 Aug 2023 | 12pm

The enzyme Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate Carboxylase/Oxygenase (RuBisCO) is responsible for the entry of atmospheric carbon into the biosphere during photosynthesis. Despite this key role, RuBisCO maintains several biochemical shortcomings, making it an attractive target for laboratory protein engineering.

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A woman with long blonde hair, smiling, wearing a colorful scarf, in front of a green bush.
18 Aug 2023 | 3:30pm

Site-specific C-to-U RNA editing is a hallmark of plant organelle transcript maturation. Up to thousands of specific cytidines are converted into uridines in plant chloroplasts and mitochondria, with no evidence of editing activity in the cytosol.

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A smiling woman with long blonde hair, wearing a black shirt, standing in front of a green, leafy background.
16 Aug 2023 | 4pm

Photorespiration (PR) is the pathway that detoxifies the product of the oxygenation reaction of Rubisco. It has been hypothesized that in dynamic light environments, PR provides a photoprotective function by serving as a sink for excess ATP and/or reducing equivalents.

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A man in a laboratory holds up a petri dish containing multiple labeled bacterial colonies.
4 Aug 2023 | 3:30pm

The tiny, self-contained genetic system of the chloroplast (or plastid) in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is well suited for genetic engineering and has recently seen a surge in the deployment of synthetic biology approaches.

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A young woman with shoulder-length dark hair smiles broadly, wearing a red top and carrying a blue backpack.
26 Jul 2023 | 3:30pm

In my talk, I’d like to introduce two of my postdoctoral studies where I explored the independent expression of two genes in tobacco: Rubisco activase (RCA) and a spider silk gene, Major ampullate spidroin 1 (MaSp1).

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A smiling man in glasses wearing a suit holds a plant, standing in a greenhouse.
24 Jul 2023 | 4pm