Find out about our latest news and events.

News

Tuesday, 05 Mar 2019

An international study has found a drought alarm system that first appeared in freshwater algae may have enabled plants to move from water to land more than 450 million years ago – a big evolutionary step that led to the emergence of land animals, including humans. 

Read the article
Tuesday, 29 Jan 2019

Human error, not human biology, largely accounts for the apparent decline of mortality among the very old, according to a new report by Saul Newman of the Research School of Biology, ANU. The result casts doubt on the hypothesis that human longevity can be greatly extended beyond current limits.

Read the article
Two people looking at a plant in a lab
Thursday, 24 Jan 2019

A scientific breakthrough intended to help boost the yields of food crops has solved a long-standing question of how cyanobacteria, known as blue-green algae, builds the carbon-capturing engines called carboxysomes in a protein liquid droplet formation.

Read the article
Tuesday, 18 Dec 2018

Susanne von Caemmerer is recognised as a worldwide expert for using mathematics to represent the process by which plants convert sunlight, gases and water into sugars and oxygen – photosynthesis.

Read the article
Tuesday, 18 Dec 2018

Fred Chow has dedicated his working life to the study of photosynthesis.

Read the article
Thursday, 13 Dec 2018

Sam Periyannan was born and brought up on a small sugar cane farm in Southern India. He never dreamed he would become a crop researcher, rather than a cane farmer.

Read the article

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.

Read the article
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.

Read the article
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.

Read the article
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.

Read the article
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).

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