Month Flat Week Day
April 2012
June 2012

Fri. 4 May, 2012

Seminar - Thierry Delatte: Trehalose 6-phosphate, a local signal with a global impact

Fri. 4 May, 2012 13:00 - 14:00
UPSC Seminars 2012
Speaker: Thierry Delatte
Laboratory of Plant Physiology
Wageningen UR, The Netherlands

Title: "Trehalose 6-phosphate, a local signal with a global impact"
Place: KB3A9 "Lilla hörsalen", KBC

Mon. 7 May, 2012

UPSC Seminar - Jehad Shaikali: The CRYPTOCHROME1-dependent response to excess light is mediated through the transcriptional activators ZML1 and 2 in Arabidopsis thaliana

Mon. 7 May, 2012 15:00 - 16:00
UPSC Seminar

Speaker:
Jehad Shaikali

Title:
The CRYPTOCHROME1-dependent response to excess light is mediated through the transcriptional activators ZML1 and 2 in Arabidopsis thaliana



Place: Lilla hörsalen, KBC

Host: Åsa Strand 

Fri. 11 May, 2012

Career outside academia Seminar and Workshop: Douglas Reeve

Fri. 11 May, 2012 10:30 - 11:30
Friday, 11 May 10:30-12:00, N 450 Naturvetarhuset
UPSC Seminar Series "career outside academia" 

Speaker: Douglas Reeve
University of Toronto, Canada 

Title: Engineers leading change to build a better world: the case for leadership education in engineering schools
 ----------------
13:30 to 16:30, N 230 (it may last less than 3 hours) 2nd floor of Naturvetarhuset
Workshop for PhD-students and postdocs on

Title:
"Values/Vision/Mission and leadership styles". 

For registration to the workshop, contact Sacha Escamez by e-mail (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.) BEFORE Friday 5th of May. 

Only the first 40 applicants will be selected for the workshop.

Tue. 15 May, 2012

Seminar -Santiago Gonzalez-Martinez: Strong population genetic structure, recent demographic decline and selection shape diversity of taxol-related genes in European yew (Taxus baccata L.):

Tue. 15 May, 2012 10:00 - 11:00
Seminar:

Santiago Gonzalez-Martinez
Center of Forest Research,Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria INIA, Spain

Strong population genetic structure, recent demographic decline and selection shape diversity of taxol-related genes in European yew (Taxus baccata L.) 

Room: KBF 30

UPSC Seminar - Gergely Molnar

Tue. 15 May, 2012 14:00 - 15:00
UPSC Seminar
Title: CUNCTATOR, a novel player in flowering time regulation at the chromatin level in Arabidopsis
Speaker: Gergely Molnar
Place: Lilla hörsalen

Wed. 16 May, 2012

Thesis Defence - Carolina Bernhardsson

Wed. 16 May, 2012 10:00 - 12:00
Department of Ecology and Environmental Science

Thesis Defence

Carolina Bernhardsson

Title:
Molecular population genetics of inducible defense genes in Populus tremula. 

Opponent: Santiago Gonzalez-Martinez
Center of Forest Research,Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria INIA, Spain

Supervisor: Stefan Jansson, UPSC 

Room: KB3B1

Wed. 23 May, 2012

PhD half-time seminar: Dmity Kremnev

Wed. 23 May, 2012 16:00 - 17:00
Umeå Plant Science Centre UPSC
Half-Time PhD seminar

Speaker
Dmitry Kremnev

Title:
PLASTID REDOX INSENSITIVE 2, is a putative regulatory component that controls PEP transcription

Fri. 25 May, 2012

Dissertation - Bastiaan Brouwer

Fri. 25 May, 2012 13:00 - 16:00
Bastiaan Brouwer is defending his thesis.
Title: Shedding Light on Shade- and Dark-Induced Leaf Senescence
Place: KB3A9

Opponent:
Karin Krupinska, Professor
Department of Plant Cell Biology,
Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel/Kiel University

Supervisor: Per Gardeström
 

Mon. 28 May, 2012

Cancelled!!!! Seminar with David Nelson

Mon. 28 May, 2012 15:00 - 16:00
This Seminar is cancelled!!!!
David Nelson

From Department of genetics, University of Georgia, Athens, USA
Place:  Lilla horsalen, 15.00

Title:
Smoke and mirrors: The curious connection between post-fire germination and shoot branching control
Abstract:
Karrikins are a class of butenolide compounds identified in smoke that have prominent roles in activating post-fire seed germination. Genetic studies performed in Arabidopsis thaliana demonstrated that the F-box protein MAX2 is required for karrikin responses. MAX2 is also necessary for responses to strigolactones, a class of plant hormones originally identified in host root exudates as highly potent germination stimulants of parasitic weeds. Strigolactones are also known to have roles in the control of shoot branching and recruitment of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi - neither of which processes are influenced by karrikins. Two homologous proteins, KAI2 and D14, have now been shown to mediate strigolactone and karrikin-specific responses in Arabidopsis. Through genetic suppressor screens we are identifying additional components of the MAX2-dependent karrikin and strigolactone signaling pathways.

Tue. 29 May, 2012

UPSC Seminar - Sergei Miroshnichenko:MAP20: study of a microtubule-associated protein in xylem

Tue. 29 May, 2012 15:00 - 16:00
UPSC Seminar
Speaker
Sergeiy Miroshnichenko
Title:
MAP20: study of a microtubule-associated protein in xylem

Place: KB3B3

Thu. 31 May, 2012

Seminar -Sacha Baginsky: Functional characterization of plant proteome dynamics

Thu. 31 May, 2012 14:00 - 15:00

Department of Chemistry

Seminar

Sacha Baginsky

Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, Institut für Biochemie und Biotechnologie, Abteilung Pflanzenbiochemie

 

Title:

 Functional characterization of plant proteome dynamics

 

Place : Lilla hörsalen, KB3A9, KBC

Host Christiane Funk

Abstract: 

Different functional proteomics tools are now available that enable the quantitative characterization of proteome dynamics and the mapping of posttranslational modifications. We report here examples how we used these tools to characterize the functional proteome of Arabidopsis and rice cell organelles, with a focus on the plant-specific plastids. We analyzed the Arabidopsis proteome at genome-scale and provide quantitative information about organellar proteomes in different plant organs by "normalized spectral counting" (Science, 320: 938-41). For a functional characterization of plastid protein import, we analyzed the proteomes of plastid protein import mutants and searched for N-terminal acetylated peptides in genome-scale WT, ppi1 and ppi2 proteomics data. These analyses revealed the accumulation of precursor proteins in the cytosol of the import mutants. In order to assess the short-term regulation of the chloroplast proteome in response to environmental signals, we analyzed the chloroplast phosphoproteome and characterized its dynamics during a circadian cycle (Plant Physiol, 150: 889-903). Differential protein phosphorylation was assessed by relative protein quantification with "extracted ion chromatograms". We present here our data, comment on reliability and reproducibility and propose strategies to increase both at a reasonable cost.

Sacha Baginsky

Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, Institut für Biochemie und Biotechnologie, Abteilung Pflanzenbiochemie, Weinbergweg 22 (Biozentrum),

06120 Halle (Saale)

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Seminar - David Hodge: Understanding and Enhancing Alkaline and Oxidative Chemical Pretreatments for the Production of Cellulosic Biofuels through Improved Characterization

Thu. 31 May, 2012 15:00 - 16:00
Seminar


Speaker:
David Hodge
Assistant Professor, Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering
Michigan State University

Title
Understanding and Enhancing Alkaline and Oxidative Chemical Pretreatments for the Production of Cellulosic Biofuels through Improved Characterization

Host: Hannele Tuominen

Place: Seminar room KB3B3 at KBC

Abstract:

This seminar will present recent research on improving technologies for oxidative chemical pretreatments and alkaline fractionation of plant biomass. One theme underlying this research is how improved characterization of the chemical, structural, and physical changes to the plant cell wall and the spectrum of compounds solubilized from the cell wall can better inform technologies for plant cell wall deconstruction and conversion to renewable fuels and chemicals. The work presented on these technologies will span four areas that include: (1) characterizing how lignin properties (S/G ratio, p-hydroxycinnamic acid content, and total lignin content) and their alteration during alkaline hydrogen peroxide (AHP) pretreatment impacts enzymatic digestibility for grasses with diverse lignin phenotypes, (2) characterizing the impacts of pretreatment on the extractability/accessibility of the non-cellulosic polysaccharides in the cell walls of diverse plants using "glycome profiling" or screening a library of 156 monoclonal antibodies against polysaccharide epitopes, (3) identifying the spectrum of fermentation inhibitors generated by AHP pretreatment of grasses for high-sugar concentration fermentation by xylose-fermenting Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains and demonstration of improved xylose fermentation and hydrolysate tolerance through evolutionary engineering, and (4) quantifying the impact of AHP pretreatment on plant cell wall water swelling capacity and how the water-cell wall environment influences its susceptibility to enzymatic hydrolysis.