🌾🧬Immune receptor MLA3 mimics a pathogen target to detect effectors. Engineered SR50 recognizes two cereal pathogens in barley.
A strategy for multiple disease resistance #plantscience @dianagdlc.bsky.social @talbotlabtsl.bsky.social @thesainsburylab.bsky.social www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Fascinating temperature effect on gene expression during conidiophore development in the pulmonary pathogen Aspergilus fumigatus suggesting perhaps that conidia are primed for parasexual or sexual development to enhance chances of survival under extreme conditions. From @mcmomany.bsky.social 👇
One-year taught MSc in Global Plant Health with five-month research project. David Sainsbury 50% Fee Scholarships available for home students. Apply now for 21 September entry. Deadline 28/8/26 for home students. www.tsl.ac.uk/msc
Just published: Meet the ancient water moulds that were already devastating plants 330 million years ago
Fossil oomycetes reveal that these notorious plant pathogens had established saprotrophic and parasitic lifestyles long ago.
By: Amal & Christine
medium.com/p/meet-the-a...
So proud to see this story finally out!🎉 We added new data since our previous preprint—transgenic barley plants with an engineered immune receptor that fights off two fungal pathogens at once. Short 🧵 and link to the original preprint thread on X👇
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Global Plant Science Spotlight
Love how scicom is so much a part of @TheSainsburyLab culture.
Inspiring words by Siyu @SiyuSong3: “science should be inclusive” 🧫 🧬 🌱 😍
IPMB Academia Sinica @IPMBSinica in Norwich 😍
Sarah @sarah_guiziou introducing the first Norwich EngBio Day.
Congrats Sarah and @EarlhamInst Team for this great event. Lets keep the momentum going and make this a regular event 😎 www.earlham.ac.uk/events/norwi...
📣NEW DISCOVERY: Plant immune receptors can evolve by mimicking effector targets & that insight enables us to engineer a disease-resistance gene that can recognise two major crop pathogens 🌾
www.tsl.ac.uk/news/plants-...
@dianagdlc.bsky.social @talbotlabtsl.bsky.social @johninnescentre.bsky.social
Plants and animals respond to pathogen attack by mounting innate immune responses that require intracellular nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat (NLR) proteins. These immune receptors detect pathog...
New Publication: Starch and tuber traits of diploid potato lines B26 and B100 and their hybrids (2026)
https://www.tsl.ac.uk/publications/167758
Sophien Kamoun
Diana Gómez De La Cruz
Sophien Kamoun
Sophien Kamoun
Sophien Kamoun
The Sainsbury Laboratory
Diploid potato breeding enables faster genetic improvement via selection against deleterious alleles in inbred lines, unlike breeding by intercrossing tetraploid varieties. Starch is the major source of calories in potato tubers, but the starch properties of diploid lines have rarely been reported. In this study, we provide a comprehensive characterisation of tuber and starch properties in two diploid lines that are early isolates from the Solynta breeding program, B26 and B100, and their F1 hybrids. B100 produced fewer, but larger tubers compared to B26, and both diploid lines produced tubers that are smaller than the tetraploid variety, Clearwater Russet. The low tuber yield of B100 correlates with its high self-compatibility and fruit production. Pruning of fruits in B100 significantly increased total tuber yield per plant by stimulating more tuber initiations, but had no effect on average tuber weight, starch content or starch structure. Among the diploid, hybrid and tetraploid lines examined, there were no differences in the total starch content of tubers. Although amylopectin structure and amylose content were similar between the two diploid lines and the tetraploid comparison, B26 had elevated levels of resistant starch and a striking elongated granule morphology. Our results showcase the variation in source-sink relations and starch structure in diploid potato breeding material, demonstrating their potential for research into the genetics underpinning metabolic and quality traits.
Huge pleasure to host today’s @TheSainsburyLab @JohnInnesCentre Friday Seminar – Prof. Erh-Min Lai @erhminlai "From Recalcitrance to Efficiency: Understanding and Expanding Agrobacteria-Mediated Transformability in Plants” 🌱 🦠 🧫
www.science.org
Plants and animals respond to pathogen attack by mounting innate immune responses that require intracellular nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat (NLR) proteins. These immune receptors detect pathog...
Big surprise just out from our lab. Transcriptome from A. fumigatus conidiophore made at 50C is upregulated for MAT1-1. Why is this sexual master regulator up in asexual development? Maybe priming future progeny for survival?
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
Michelle Momany
Aspergillus fumigatus is a thermotolerant saprobe found in soils and plant debris worldwide and an important pathogen of humans causing two million deaths annually. A. fumigatus makes abundant asexual...