University scientists involved in major international plant reproduction study
Leicester is part of a major new study on the evolution of sexual reproduction in plants which has received 2.6 million euros in funding.
David Twell, Professor of Plant Biology, is leading the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ  team of researchers in a major study on plant sperm cells as part of a consortium of institutions across Europe and the United States.
The project gives the researchers the opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of the evolution of sexual reproduction of economically important plant species, using the latest genetic technologies.
Professor Twell said: “My team in the s will explore how fertile sperm are made by flowering plants and compare this process with that which occurs in relative of the earliest land plants, known as bryophytes – the mosses and liverworts.â€
“By comparing gene networks in important crop plants such as maize and tomato with those in the earliest relatives of the flowering plants we hope to find new genes and achieve a greater understanding of genes which may be affected by environmental stress such as heat and drought.â€
The Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµâ€™s will provide essential growth facilities for the project.
The project is funded under the scope of , a European network dedicated to the support of research activities in Plant Sciences. The UK will be providing funding to support research at Leicester in the ERA-CAPS programme.