UK-Brazil International Partnering Award: Development of novel strategies to address plant-microbes interactions in planta
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Warwick
Department Name: School of Life Sciences
Abstract
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Description | Microbiome strategic road map |
Geographic Reach | Europe |
Policy Influence Type | Participation in a guidance/advisory committee |
URL | https://iuk.ktn-uk.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Microbiome_Strategic_Roadmap_FINAL.pdf |
Description | Development of novel strategies to address plant-microbes interactions in planta |
Organisation | Universidade de São Paulo |
Country | Brazil |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | This is a new UK-Brazil international partnership to study plant-microbe interactions involved in symbiosis and regulation of plant growth and development influenced by the circadian clock between the University of Warwick and the University of São Paulo, Brazil. It brings together recent work by Isabelle Carré and Miriam Gifford at the University of Warwick uncovered the impact of the circadian clock on symbiotic interaction between the legume Medicago truncatula and nitrogen-fixing rhizobia, leading to a current BBSRC-funded project (BB/T015357/1; Achom et al. 2021 Journal of Experimental Botany). |
Collaborator Contribution | It also links the work of Isabelle Carré and Gary Bending at the University of Warwick who discovered that plant circadian rhythms influence the composition of the rhizosphere microbiome (Newman et al., Under Revision). Joining forces with Carlos Hotta and Marie-Anne Van Sluys at the University of São Paulo, Brazil, will enable us to access expertise on circadian rhythms and endophytes in the important crop of sugarcane (Dantas et al. 2021 New Phytologist). It will also bring enable use of fluorescent bacterial cell lines, which will be valuable tools for validation of our experimental approaches. |
Impact | Updated March 2023: (1) Researcher exchange from University of São Paulo -> University of Warwick (November 2022): researchers developed bacterial GFP-lines to track endophyte colonisation of Setaria viridis at Warwick and learnt methods for cell dissociation from tissue, and cell sorting. (2) Researcher exchange from University of Warwick -> University of São Paulo (February 2023): researchers developed methods to separate and sequence endophytes, using a range of cell strainers and sequence of dissociation methods. Next we plan a bilateral workshop to plan next steps. |
Start Year | 2022 |