Don't miss our weekly PhD newsletter | Sign up now Don't miss our weekly PhD newsletter | Sign up now

  Seasonality control of barley flowering: from the lab to the field


   Department of Biology

This project is no longer listed on FindAPhD.com and may not be available.

Click here to search FindAPhD.com for PhD studentship opportunities
  Prof S J Davis, Dr A Harper  No more applications being accepted  Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

Flowering time is a critical developmental transition in barley, as the plant stops making leaves and allocates resources to reproduction. The circadian clock is a key determinant for when in a season barley flowers. The clock gene Ppd-H1 is associated with the spring behaviour and we have identified another clock gene termed EAM8 that further "migrates" barley. In arid conditions such as the Iberian peninsula, it is advantageous for barley to be sown before winter to leverage mild winter conditions, resulting in higher yield and increased fitness. Winter barley is the ancestral genetic state, and germinates in autumn before overwintering, enabling the process of vernalisation to trigger receptiveness for the potential to flower. Flowering then occurs with the advancing photoperiods in the spring.

There is an academic and pre-breeding interest to appraise barley flowering in a genetic context where there are vernalisation requirements, but where the oscillator has been tuned to appropriately time flowering to a given agro-climatic zone. For this the York and Syngenta partners have constructed clock mutations in winter barley. These would be assessed under controlled climate chambers, greenhouse settings and multiple field sites in the UK and around continental Europe for heading date and flowering time. Gene-expression profiles and changes in the reproductive stem-cells (the floral meristem) would be imaged. Coupled to biometry of plant form, including tillering and numerous seed-yield traits, grain characteristics would be assessed and quantified in these lines to additionally relate flowering time in controlled and field setting to products of commercial relevance.

It is of profound academic interest to understand how a plant responds to its growing season. The molecular genetics of the flowering-time network in winter barley is not known, and the clock alleles we generated for this work are advanced genetic states to evaluate this molecular-genetic network.


Funding Notes

Funding: This is a 4 year fully-funded industrial CASE studentship part of the BBSRC White Rose Doctoral Training Partnership in Mechanistic Biology. The studentship covers: (i) a tax-free stipend at the standard Research Council rate (around £15,000 per year), (ii) tuition fees at UK/EU rate, (iii) research consumables and training necessary for the project. The iCASE partner is Syngenta Seeds GmbH.

Entry requirements: At least an upper second class honours degree, or equivalent in any biological, chemical, and/or physical science. Students with mathematical backgrounds who are interested in using their skills in addressing biological questions are also welcome to apply.

References

Eligibility: The studentships are available to UK and EU students who meet the UK residency requirements. Students from EU countries who do not meet the residency requirements may still be eligible for a fees-only award. Further information about eligibility for Research Council UK funding

How good is research at University of York in Biological Sciences?


Research output data provided by the Research Excellence Framework (REF)

Click here to see the results for all UK universities

Where will I study?