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Research Topic : Proteomics
Scheme : Discovery Projects
Field of Research : Plant Physiology
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Plant Physiology (3)
Proteomics and Intermolecular Interactions (excl. Medical Proteomics) (3)
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Plant Cell and Molecular Biology (2)
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  • Researchers (34)
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  • Active Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP190103140

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $400,000.00
    Summary
    Re-engineering rice root architecture to maximise water use efficiency. This project aims to discover gene networks responsible for producing deeper and more branched roots in rice plants. The roots of plants are the primary mechanism for absorbing water and nutrients from the soil. Manipulating roots to penetrate deeper with greater branching allows plants to thrive with less water and less nutrients. The project will identify key genes and proteins responsible for this process, and alter their .... Re-engineering rice root architecture to maximise water use efficiency. This project aims to discover gene networks responsible for producing deeper and more branched roots in rice plants. The roots of plants are the primary mechanism for absorbing water and nutrients from the soil. Manipulating roots to penetrate deeper with greater branching allows plants to thrive with less water and less nutrients. The project will identify key genes and proteins responsible for this process, and alter their expression in order to assess the role of these regulatory elements in root development in rice plants. The project expects to provide new, more sustainable varieties of rice which will help provide enhanced food security.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP180104136

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $368,400.00
    Summary
    Defining factors that influence protein turnover in plants. This project aims to discover how the functions of different proteins change as they age, and to define factors that dictate protein stability inside plants. This project will change protein turnover rates in plants by altering a regulator of this process to assess the role of this regulator in different plant developmental transitions. Expected outcomes include showing how protein abundance can be altered in plants for our future agric .... Defining factors that influence protein turnover in plants. This project aims to discover how the functions of different proteins change as they age, and to define factors that dictate protein stability inside plants. This project will change protein turnover rates in plants by altering a regulator of this process to assess the role of this regulator in different plant developmental transitions. Expected outcomes include showing how protein abundance can be altered in plants for our future agricultural and biotechnology needs. This will provide significant benefits, such as discovering processes inside plant cells that maintain the quality of different kinds of proteins and propose how different kinds of proteins can be stabilised for plant biotechnology applications.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP140101875

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $408,000.00
    Summary
    Answering longstanding plant ecology questions with new technology: the effects of changes in leaf proteins with age. Total leaf nitrogen is important for major processes in ecosystems. It is used as a predictor for carbon fixation because photosynthesis proteins are a large fraction of leaf nitrogen. Yet leaf nitrogen may also be allocated to stress-response and defense-related proteins at the expense of photosynthesis proteins. Our working hypothesis might explain two important ecological patt .... Answering longstanding plant ecology questions with new technology: the effects of changes in leaf proteins with age. Total leaf nitrogen is important for major processes in ecosystems. It is used as a predictor for carbon fixation because photosynthesis proteins are a large fraction of leaf nitrogen. Yet leaf nitrogen may also be allocated to stress-response and defense-related proteins at the expense of photosynthesis proteins. Our working hypothesis might explain two important ecological patterns: the decline of photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency with leaf age; and, low and variable nitrogen recovery levels from senescent leaves across species and habitats. New quantitative proteomics methods together with protein functional categorisation can answer these questions across dozens of Australian native plant species.
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