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Sainsbury Laboratory

I completed my undergraduate degree in Biological Sciences at the University of Oxford. During my undergraduate, I worked in the lab of Liam Dolan on the role of miRNAs in the development of the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha.

In 2019, I joined the lab of Ottoline Leyser to undertake my PhD on the regulation of shoot branching in Arabidopsis thaliana. In my PhD, I investigate how multiple regulatory signals, including the plant hormones auxin and strigolactone, are integrated to determine the activity and growth dynamics of axillary buds. In addition, I combine experiments and mathematical modelling to understand the dynamics of competition between axillary buds.

 

Research Interests

Plant shoot architecture is continually modulated during growth, giving plants a huge degree of phenotypic plasticity and enabling them to adapt to changing environmental conditions. This is very advantageous given their sessile nature. A key determinant of shoot architecture is the activity of axillary buds, which have the same developmental potential as the main stem, but the outgrowth of which can be suppressed through a phenomenon known as apical dominance. The decision of a bud to grow out requires the integration of local and systemic signals, making it an example of decentralised decision making.

PhD Student
 Zoe  Nahas

Contact Details

Sainsbury Laboratory
University of Cambridge
47 Bateman Street
Cambridge
CB2 1LR
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