From Kale to Kathmandu
Recent work between plant pathologists at the John Innes Centre and plant breeding companies in the UK and Nepal are a great example of why sharing the knowledge we gain is an important part of being a scientist
Read the storyRecent work between plant pathologists at the John Innes Centre and plant breeding companies in the UK and Nepal are a great example of why sharing the knowledge we gain is an important part of being a scientist
Read the storyAfter four years endeavour, Nicola Capstaff has just submitted her PhD thesis. Before she could relax and enjoy the moment, we asked her what she has done and what she wants to do next? Her answer was a move into scientific policy
Read the storyPhD student Joshua Joyce is off to Brasilia for the Youth Ag Summit this week, we caught up with him before he boarded his flight to find out what it was all about
Read the storyOn 29 October 2019, we became a Member of the “Plants for the Future” European Technology Platform
Read the storyResearchers have developed an open source, reproducible Agrobacterium-mediated transformation system for the spring wheat cultivar Fielder
Read the storyNorwich Research Park Biosciences Doctoral Training Partnership (NRPDTP) has been awarded £12 million to train the next generation of bioscientists
Read the storyA study by researchers at the John Innes Centre has discovered that calcium plays a key role in primary root development
Read the storyAlicia Russell is both a fourth year PhD Student here at the John Innes Centre and chair of the Student Voice committee, which provides support and representation for our PhD students, plus the odd board game and pizza night
Read the storyIf you’re a scientist, rather than looking at a single chemical that is interesting, why not look at all the chemicals that make up a plant at once? That’s metabolomics
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