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The centre will use genome-wide analyses to define key cellular processes that enable adapted plants to withstand abiotic stress, and to apply that understanding of diversity for the genetic improvement of crops such as wheat and barley.

The processes will be traced from genes, through proteins and enzymes, to metabolites and specialised proteins that act to protect the cells from stress-related damage.

We will define mechanisms of stress perception and corresponding receptors, key signal transduction pathways, protein-protein interactions and the structures of key proteins. The more specific aims of the centre are therefore to:

 •  Identify the genetic mechanisms that control tolerance to specific stresses and compare these with those controlling broad range tolerance to abiotic stresses

 •  Unravel regulatory networks that control plant growth under abiotic stress

 •  Identify ways of manipulating these networks, through existing genetic diversity or through functional genomics technologies, to deliver tangible industry outcomes, namely cereal varieties better tailored to hostile environments.

     
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