Mon. 15 Feb, 2016 - Sun. 21 Feb, 2016
Mon. 15 Feb, 2016
Cutting Edge Seminar - Seth Davis: Plant circadian clocks: mechanisms and purposes
Mon. 15 Feb, 2016 10:00 - 11:00
UPSC Seminar Series
Cutting Edge Seminar
Speaker
Seth Davis
Chair of Plant Biology
Department of Biology, University of York
Heslington, York, UK
Title: Plant circadian clocks: mechanisms and purposes
Host: Maria Eriksson
Place: Lilla hörsalen, KB3A9, KBC
Abstract:
Plant circadian clocks: mechanisms and purposes
Plant growth and stress resistance are coordinated outputs that respond to predictable environmental variation that results from the earth's rotation. An interplay exists between exogenous environmental sensing and endogenous responses. Plants use a circadian clock to time such processes such that homeostasis is achieved. This creates fitness and maximizes growth. The circadian clock itself is a multiple transcriptional-translational feedback system that provides temporal information to coordinate stress resistance and metabolic responses. In this talk I will overview clock mechanism and then highlight our current efforts to examine the metabolic, stress response and circadian systems as integrated processes. Their combined effects on growth and development will be explored in a dicot and a monocot, both in the lab and in the field.
Cutting Edge Seminar
Speaker
Seth Davis
Chair of Plant Biology
Department of Biology, University of York
Heslington, York, UK
Title: Plant circadian clocks: mechanisms and purposes
Host: Maria Eriksson
Place: Lilla hörsalen, KB3A9, KBC
Abstract:
Plant circadian clocks: mechanisms and purposes
Plant growth and stress resistance are coordinated outputs that respond to predictable environmental variation that results from the earth's rotation. An interplay exists between exogenous environmental sensing and endogenous responses. Plants use a circadian clock to time such processes such that homeostasis is achieved. This creates fitness and maximizes growth. The circadian clock itself is a multiple transcriptional-translational feedback system that provides temporal information to coordinate stress resistance and metabolic responses. In this talk I will overview clock mechanism and then highlight our current efforts to examine the metabolic, stress response and circadian systems as integrated processes. Their combined effects on growth and development will be explored in a dicot and a monocot, both in the lab and in the field.