Spring Lecture Series 2022 Detail
Shoot patterning dynamics: space, time and specificity in hormonal responses - by Prof. Teva Vernoux
Speaker: Teva Vernoux
CNRS Research Director and Group leader of Laboratoire
RDP,
ENS de Lyon (France)
Join us in Building 2, Level 5, Room 5220.
Abstract
Understanding how plant cells decide where to respond, when to respond and what type of transcriptional response they should give to a developmental signal is at the heart of our interrogations on how plant hormones drive the dynamic construction of plants and developmental responses to environmental stimuli. We will discuss our recent findings on this topic, taking examples of regulations of patterning by auxin and gibberellins in both root and shoot meristems.
About the speaker
After a predoc in Ghent, Teva Vernoux did hid PhD at INRAE in Versailles before moving on for a PostDoc at Duke University. He established his group at the RDP in Lyon in 2005. His research is focused on robustness and self-organization of developmental processes in plants. Prof. Vernoux explored these questions by addressing primarily the role of plant hormones in patterning and morphogenesis at the shoot apical meristem. He is using interdisciplinary approaches ranging from quantitative live imaging, biosensor development, functional genomics, biochemistry and structural biology to modeling, in order to unravel how these developmental regulators act across scale to build a robust shoot architecture.