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Sainsbury Laboratory

Read more at: Professor Giles Oldroyd elected to National Academy of Sciences
Giles Oldroyd at SLCU with lab area in background

Professor Giles Oldroyd elected to National Academy of Sciences

Professor Giles Oldroyd has been elected as an international member of the National Academy of Sciences in the USA.


Read more at: Peas n Chips: Creating food security with African Yam Bean

Peas n Chips: Creating food security with African Yam Bean

Can one plant produce both tasty and nutritious beans and tubers? Yes, the African yam bean can. Not only does it grow high-protein edible grains and tubers, this drought-resilient crop also replenishes the soil and is highly adaptable to varying-climates.


Read more at: How plant stem cells renew themselves – a cytokinin story
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How plant stem cells renew themselves – a cytokinin story

The mechanism by which the plant hormone cytokinin controls cell division has been discovered – a breakthrough that significantly improves our understanding of how plants grow.


Read more at: How plant roots generate a hormone gradient

How plant roots generate a hormone gradient

The research team that developed a biosensor that first recorded that a distinct gradient of the plant growth hormone gibberellin correlated with plant cell size has now revealed how this distribution pattern is created in roots.


Read more at: New research team joins SLCU

New research team joins SLCU

Chris Whitewoods will join the SLCU research leadership team to head a new research group focused on understanding how plants pattern themselves in three dimensions.


Read more at: SLCU joins EU partners in 11 million euro cell division project

SLCU joins EU partners in 11 million euro cell division project

SLCU's François Nédélec has joined Andrea Musacchio , from the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Physiology in Dortmund, and Thomas Surrey , from the Centre for Genomic Regulation in Barcelona, to study one of the most fundamental processes in life – cell division. Their project has been awarded a prestigious ERC Synergy...


Read more at: New insights could help plants fortify walls against root pathogens

New insights could help plants fortify walls against root pathogens

Sainsbury Laboratory Cambridge University (SLCU) researchers, as part of a multidisciplinary international team, have uncovered a mechanism controlling subtle changes to the architecture of cell walls in plant roots that bolsters their defence against Phytophthora palmivora without negatively affecting plant growth.


Read more at: Giles Oldroyd elected as member of EMBO

Giles Oldroyd elected as member of EMBO

Professor Giles Oldroyd is among 63 other scientists from around the world elected this year as Members and Associate Members of the European Molecular Biology Organisation (EMBO).


Read more at: Cells in tight spaces – how the cytoskeleton responds to different cell geometries

Cells in tight spaces – how the cytoskeleton responds to different cell geometries

Inside every living cell, there is a network of protein filaments providing an interior scaffold controlling the cell’s shape called the cytoskeleton. Research from the Sainsbury Laboratory Cambridge University (SLCU) suggests that this relationship might actually be two-way, with cell geometry itself having the capacity to influence the organisation of the cytoskeleton in living plant cells.


Read more at: Professor Dame Ottoline Leyser appointed as new CEO of UKRI

Professor Dame Ottoline Leyser appointed as new CEO of UKRI

Professor Dame Ottoline Leyser DBE FRS, Director of the Sainsbury Laboratory at the University of Cambridge, has been appointed the new Chief Executive Officer of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), the national funding agency investing in science and research in the UK.